He spends much time labeling and psychoanalyzing the people who disagree with him
[...]
But in the last few years, as his firm a16z took in $7.6B of capital to make a disastrous bet on âWeb3â, while charging LPs an estimated $1B in management fees for the privilege, heâs been putting out a stream of disingenuous and logically-invalid arguments.
For those who didnât follow Marcâs Web3 debacle, Iâve kept the receipts:
Criticizing pmarca for not engaging with the core of the argument, while simultaneously bringing up "receipts" for unrelated criticisms is odd. This behavior is more consistent with someone who has an axe to grind than with someone who is offended by 'poor âsportsmanshipâ' in discourse.
It is logically consistent to dismiss an "AI doomer" claim by positing it's based on a category error. That doesn't mean you argue for the exact logical negation of the claims, so you don't automatically grant that it wasn't a category error to begin with.
There is a broader, and arguably more common, definition for "category mistake". A statement can be a "category mistake" or not depending on the context. Quoting from <https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/category-mistakes/>: