The Alleged Rules Of Writing

…are actually superstitions. An interesting essay from Steven Pinker:

I have long recognised the need for a style guide based on modern linguistics and cognitive science. The manuals written by journalists and essayists often had serviceable rules of thumb, but they were also idiosyncratic, crabby, and filled with folklore and apocrypha. Linguistics experts, for their part, have been scathing about the illogic and ignorance in traditional advice on usage, but have been unwilling to proffer their own pointers to which rules to follow or how to use grammar effectively. The last straw in my decision to sit down and write the book was getting back a manuscript that had been mutilated by a copy editor who, I could tell, was mindlessly enforcing rules that had been laid out in some ancient style book as if they were the Ten Commandments.

As in many other life activities, it’s OK to break the “rules” if a) you know the rules and the reasons for them and b) you know what you’re doing. Unfortunately, that’s a rare combination.

I liked this:

The real problem is that writing, unlike speaking, is an unnatural act. In the absence of a conversational partner who shares the writer’s background and who can furrow her brows or break in and ask for clarification when he stops making sense, good writing depends an ability to imagine a generic reader and empathise about what she already knows and how she interprets the flow of words in real time. Writing, above all, is a topic in cognitive psychology.

It’s what I try to do when I write, though it’s always best to have someone else read it to say, “what do you mean by that?”

5 thoughts on “The Alleged Rules Of Writing”

  1. “The real problem is that writing, unlike speaking, is an unnatural act.”

    So Socrates was right all along. Everything’s gone to hell since it was invented.

  2. “It’s what I try to do when I write, though it’s always best to have someone else read it to say, “what do you mean by that?””

    I’m not sure I follow you.

  3. If you really want some good rules for writing, it’s hard to improve on Mark Twain. The last few are shown below….#14 being my all time fave:

    An author should

    12. _Say_ what he is proposing to say, not merely come near it.
    13. Use the right word, not its second cousin.
    14. Eschew surplusage.
    15. Not omit necessary details.
    16. Avoid slovenliness of form.
    17. Use good grammar.
    18. Employ a simple, straightforward style.

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