I disagree on both counts. I think my comment is recapitulating the core claims of the main piece (and am pretty confident the author would agree).
In my comment I mention the total S/T/N framework only because MaxDalton suggested that when properly viewed within that framework, the concerns with ‘scale’ Joey raised, don’t apply. I argued that that Joey’s concerns apply even if you are applying the full S/T/N framework, but I don’t think they apply only if you are applying the full framework.
I disagree on both counts. I think my comment is recapitulating the core claims of the main piece (and am pretty confident the author would agree).
In my comment I mention the total S/T/N framework only because MaxDalton suggested that when properly viewed within that framework, the concerns with ‘scale’ Joey raised, don’t apply. I argued that that Joey’s concerns apply even if you are applying the full S/T/N framework, but I don’t think they apply only if you are applying the full framework.
OK, but then the issue is problem individuation, not the conception of scale used.