Re: virus: Essays the Easy Way

From: Jonathan Davis (jonathan.davis@lineone.net)
Date: Tue Jul 30 2002 - 06:43:40 MDT


Excellent Hermit. Thanks. May I blog this (with attribution as always)?

----- Original Message -----
From: "Hermit" <hidden@lucifer.com>
To: <virus@lucifer.com>
Sent: Tuesday, July 30, 2002 11:58 AM
Subject: virus: Essays the Easy Way

>
> This was written to answer a specific question posed on the #virus IRC
channel at irc.lucifer.com:6667, but may be more generally useful.
>
> Essays the Easy Way
>
> Start at the end.
> What you want the recipient to do.
> Not to think, to do.
> Begin by writing the conclusion with a desired outcome action.
> What do you want the recipient to do after reading it.
> Having written that, consider what the necessary prerequisites are to make
them see that as the only possible reasonable cause of action.
> Then flesh those out.
> [Hermit] Next consider what "common sense" or memeplexii you have
conflicted with - and fix it so you don't.
> Competing with existing memplexii is futile. You will lose. For example:If
you say, cryopreservation won't work - no matter how reasonable your
grounds, you will lose the attention of the cryopreservation enthusiasts.
> If you say "Better than God" to an Christian, his existing memeplexii will
immediate turn you into a missionary of Satan...
> etc.
> At this point, writing an introduction should be easy. All you have to do
is examine your "supporting" paragraphs and then write a suitable passage
explaining why these points are important (i.e. why you have inserted them).
> It is preferable if, in the introduction, you can introduce the idea which
you would like action taken on. People are sheep and typically have terrible
comprehension skills. Telling them, I am going to tell you, followed by
telling them, and summarizing with "Do this" stands a much better chance of
being understood and acted upon.
> This "bottom-up" construction method has the immense benefit of avoiding
the temptation to follow extraneous threads and confuse the issues.
> Try not to accomplish more than one aim in a single letter, else you will
just confuse the recipients.
>
> I would add, that it is always much easier to precise the work of, or
advise others than to deal with your own work. So forgive me for not always
living up to these high ideals :-)
>
> Regards
>
> Hermit
>
> ----
> This message was posted by Hermit to the Virus 2002 board on Church of
Virus BBS.
>
<http://virus.lucifer.com/bbs/index.php?board=51;action=display;threadid=258
64>



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