Should I feel non-smart for not understanding the evil of a list of features as the most helpful way for someone to grasp what is it we are talking about? am I an inferior human being?
An ancient question is: "What is man?"
A school of philosophy concluded:
Man will be defined as:
So someone plucked a chicken and threw it into their compound.
Breaking things into lists is a very valuable and useful tool. The term "Analyse" refers to just this - cutting up the complicated object into pieces we can understand. Vast leaps forward in knowledge have come because of our ability to do this. Abstracting "gravity" from all the other stuff that happens when stuff falls gives a nice clean understanding. The problem is that when cut through the sinew to separate the organs, you lose all of the relationships between the parts. This "Sum is greater than the parts" problem I think is what mushroom patch is frustrated with.
My own view is the fault is on the reader who decides to ignore all subtlety just because a list showed up. I suspect such readers wouldn't have read a five page essay on roguelikes either. If the Berlin Interpretation would have been a five page essay, people would have just sniped key sentences and used them out of context, in effect creating a list for future people to slavishly follow.
I also believe there *is* a genuine advantage to analysing roguelikes. While we always lose essential relationships between those qualities, it is a lot easier to think of what it means to have a "Single player character game" than it is to always compare back to the holotypes.
So, when someone eventually makes a 7drl that matches all points of the Berlin Interpretation but isn't a roguelike (which people have been threatening since day 1!), it really doesn't prove that there is anything wrong with the Berlin Interpretation. It merely underscores that "roguelikeness" is not a checklist of features, just like "human" isn't a checklist of features.
But, it is *useful* to note that "Humans are bipeds", even if "Biped" isn't a necessary or sufficient definition of Human. (In particular, someone who loses a leg isn't kicked out of humanity! (anymore))