steelman

See also: Steelman

English

Etymology

steel + -man

For the second definition, possibly coined as the inverse of straw man.

Noun

steelman (plural steelmen)

  1. A steelworker.
  2. A stronger version of an argument that one is about to refute.
    • 2012 July 7, Guy Srinivasan, “Wireheading Steelman”, in lw-seattle, Usenet:
      I want to make that strawman into a steelman, but I eliminated "the pursuit of happiness" from my to-do list so many years ago that I don't even know where I'd begin.

Verb

steelman (third-person singular simple present steelmans, present participle steelmanning, simple past and past participle steelmanned)

  1. To refute a stronger version of an argument than what was actually given; to repair flaws in an argument before refuting it.
    • 2012 July 7, Guy Srinivasan, “Wireheading Steelman”, in lw-seattle, Usenet:
      I don't agree with the argument, because of 4. If I were to steelman it, which I may try but after work or maybe during lunch, I would first try to make it impervious to this assault:
    • 2015 February 11, Daniel Armak, “Re: volunteers for feb 24.”, in LessWrong Tel Aviv, Usenet:
      It is possible that while preparing for the talk I will manage to convince myself that the problem is in fact resolved or dissolved. In that case I will treat you to my best steelmanning of the problem, and its resolution.
    • 2015 June 18, rndn, “Going Deeper into Neural Networks”, in Hacker News, Usenet:
      Perhaps the argument should be steelmanned in that we should generally avoid using algorithms which are so complex that they aren't glass boxes.

Anagrams

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.