from [/villagepump/Is it more interesting if the community itself is more unitary?](https://scrapbox.io/villagepump/Is it more interesting if the community itself is more unitary?) from Communities that are allowed to go through Would the community itself be rather more interesting if it were more unitary?
chat log - Tomoya Tachikawa (T): It is not necessary to maintain diversity within a community, and the community itself is more interesting if it is highly unitary. It is more interesting if an individual belongs to multiple communities and maintains diversity among them.
nishio (n): what is a highly unitary community?
T: I imagine that people have a lot of knowledge, and they can just say, "You know what?
N: If the definition is that all participants are similar, then of course I who am participating in them are similar, so if I belong to community A and B, then A and B are also similar
"Some knowledge is shared in high concentration throughout." or
N: In the end, that's "I enjoy a community where knowledge is shared in high concentration."
T: Yes.
N: Hypothesis: Because of Mr. Tachikawa's idea that "all participants should be able to enjoy," interpretation tailored to those without knowledge and topic control will spoil the fun in the absence of high concentration of knowledge sharing.
T Oh, that's right.
N: You implicitly assume voice synchronous communication.
T: Oh, you do.
N: There is a community of culture that says, "Don't demand that the reader skim what they are not interested in, don't demand that the speaker output so much to the reader's expectations."
T: Is that something that if the speaker offers a topic that no one is interested in, everyone will skip over it?
N: Yes
T: Then the speaker would automatically leave the community
N: Online communities blur the boundaries of participation and non-participation, so it's possible.
T: Ah, okay, it's possible that you're throwing different things into the "community" box!
N: Tachikawa's level of expectation for the community is high
T: I agree with this and it's more like ownership than expectations for the community
N: Mr. Tachikawa sees the community as "an object that you can improve," while the majority of people see it as "something that is there naturally.
T: I see!
N: I think that at least geographical communities occur naturally, but instead they are connected only because they are "in the same place," so if they leave, they are cut off. If there is a will to create a "community that continues to be connected even after you leave," then the community that Mr. Tachikawa is referring to is created for that purpose.
T: My thinking is different. For example, in a community of college classmates, if someone doesn't have a sense of "we're classmates, so we want to get along with each other," it won't happen.
N: It reflects the high expectations of Mr. Tachikawa, who only recognizes as a community a community of people who share the intention to "get along".
T: I'm not sure about the classification, but it's certainly true that you have a purpose other than just wanting to get along.
There's also a type of participation where you don't actively go in, but if you get involved, you try to get involved a little bit, and if you're not uncomfortable, you settle in.
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