Ask HN: Is it immoral not to correct someone else's grammar on social media?
2 amichail 21 9/17/2025, 6:19:32 PM
People use grammar to judge your education and intelligence all the time.
That's why they don't want you correcting other people's grammar online — it threatens a signal they rely on.
But online writing should be judged by content, not grammar.
And so it would seem that failing to correct someone else's grammar online is not just unhelpful — it is immoral.
I err towards caution and wouldn't dare presume I'm qualified to correct others.
The same is true with Maths.
First, does the question of morality even apply in this situation? Perhaps I could see it in the decision of the Trolley Problem, where it's life or death.
But whether or not to tell someone "you're not your" feels too trivial a problem to involve morality at all - it seems one just does it or doesn't.
Through unfortunate mistakes in life, I've also learned that moral pressure often leads to one's own moral degradation.
"If you don't do this, you are immoral." I was told this about certain things. Obviously, I didn't want to be a bad person. So I took action - or rather, what I thought action was. It didn't matter if I was clueless or uninformed of nuances in the problem; I was obligated.
The counterpoint was - acting is moral. Therefore, I could justify any actions as contributing to that grand scheme. How could I be criticized when my intentions were good? Well, "the road to hell is paved with good intentions."
So even if I don't see how it fits, one has to ponder the effects if we're to force morality into this equation. Failing to correct means you're immoral and bad, so I constantly do it as an obligation, perhaps out of fear, and regardless of thought. The core ideas get ignored for pedantic, hardly relevant details.
It was also a slippery slope for me to paint a broad, pessimistic stroke with people to base one's actions. A nebulous opposition group that "they" are out to cause harm, so anything I did was justified as punching back. In reality, I made many problems out of nothing from my assumptions.
In any case, I don't feel it's my duty, nor do I have the desire to "correct" someone or get involved in their life, particularly when it's unwarranted.
I once believed it was, and that's also when my worst behaviors occurred. Because I was unknowledgeable, unaware of nuances, and perhaps even crass, yet felt "obligated" to act anyway and feed my ego.
That being said, I also see grammar and content as equivalent. Poor grammar will inevitably affect how one's ideas are conveyed. However, I also take in context beyond the words, like a person's background - it's not black and white.
I may have subconscious thoughts, but it's not my place to do any correcting. It's my prerogative to seek out what I resonate with - grammared or grammarless. Just as it's no one else's duty to "fix" me.
I think the other part of it, which is not trivial, is the rise of phones. People are typing on little keyboard and auto-correct can have a heavy hand. People don’t want to be judged for auto-correct getting one word wrong, invalidating a legitimate argument, so they look past potential auto-correct mistakes from others. The Internet has become much more tolerant of misspelling and mistakes, for better or worse.
If it’s a clear knowledge gap, then think a correction is helpful and warranted. For example someone saying “mute point” or “per say”. By all means, let them know. Ironically, auto-correct fixed both of those and I had to go out of my way to mess them up again.
If you can offer genuine advice privately, then you can but otherwise if you feel it might come off as rude or pedantic, then I would shy away from it.
I do judge spelling errors harshly, since most modern OSes will give a nasty red squiggle.
Anyways "immoral" is such a strong phrasing. Killing someone is immoral.
Letting someone argue their point badly is... well, I was raised Catholic so lets use that lens: Catholicism would refer to it as a "venial sin" -- you won't be going to hell for not correcting someone's grammar on the internet.
For what it is worth, I used to feel the urge to correct but as I have grown wiser in my years I now see many people smarter than me use grammar in ways i do not. Now i see people who correct others grammar and spelling as pedantic jerks.
Almost every social media system has some way to contact someone without shaming them in the public thread.
Who is “they”?
>People use grammar to judge your education and intelligence all the time.
You really shouldnt judge others; like ever.
>And so it would seem that failing to correct someone else's grammar online is not just unhelpful — it is immoral.
So you're saying correcting someone's grammar is helpful and moral?
Nobody is stopping you from doing this of course. If you believe it is moral to do, then do it.
Thanks for this. I often see folks like OP very condescendingly tell people they're not writing "correctly", while forgetting that English is a constantly evolving language -- at a certain point if a "mistake" becomes mainstream, it becomes an acceptable one.
(I'm struggling for more complex examples, but think of how people will say, declare "that's not a word"... well, usage of "not a word"s is how they end up going into the dictionary...)