Who Can Draft Unsupervised ── Decided by Floors, Not Averages
The level at which a creator may draft independently, set not by an average of scores but by non-compensatory gates (floors). Harm asymmetry, why persuasion cannot fill a sourcing hole, the four gates, and a pass/fail demonstration across three fixed types ── a design that refuses to let persuasive misperception through. Ten parts.
序
Introduction — Getting the Whole Picture First
Grab the whole picture before the episodes.
The map →
01
How to Tell Who Can Build Materials Alone — Don't Judge by the Average of Skills
Can we let someone build materials alone? If we average eight skills, slick persuasion masks holes in sourcing.
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02
Bending the Facts Is Far Heavier Than a Plain Mistake
Some failures are light, others heavy.
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03
The More Skilled the Communicator, the Less Their Misleading Slips Get Noticed
Someone who presents well can look right even when wrong.
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04
Fail One, Fail All ── Appeal Cannot Patch a Hole in the Facts
A 95 in language arts means nothing if another subject scores zero — some things cannot be passed on an average.
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05
Demand One Thing Above All: Can They Return to the Source
Before you let someone make materials alone, some weaknesses can be tolerated.
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06
Making It Look Good and Making It Right Are Two Different Things
When we see a polished design, we tend to feel the content must be correct too.
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07
People Who Are Sure Their Own Material Is Fine Cannot Be Trusted Alone
The more skilled the maker, the more flatly they declare their material fine.
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08
Four Gates — Draft, Self-Review, Source-Check, Balance-Check
Whether you can let someone release materials alone is not decided by the final polish.
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09
Judging Three People by One Standard: The Persuader, the Precise Craftsperson, and the Quiet but Trustworthy
There are three material-makers.
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10
The Judge's Responsibility — Line Up the Reference Cases, and Let a Person Make the Final Call
When a standard is handed out only as words, each person reads it differently.
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