I have no problem with metamathematics, philosophy or dirty things in general and, in my experience, most mathematicians have no such problems.
]]>for most of you it was not interesting
I don't think that's a good conclusion to draw.
Maybe lots of people found it interesting, and maybe not. But with most of these debates about why a question is closed, the issue is independent of whether a question is interesting. It's about whether a question is appropriate.
Since MO started six months ago, there's been a constant process of trying to figure out what an "appropriate question" for the site is. I think there's something like a consensus now, though that consensus will probably shift about as time passes. There are lots of questions on this site that are appropriate but don't particularly interest me personally. There are a few questions that are appropriate but hardly seem to interest anyone (judging by the response). Then there are questions that are interesting but inappropriate, perhaps because they don't fit the MO question-and-answer format. Maybe (like your question) they look like they belong in a blog, rather than here.
So, a question being closed doesn't mean that it's not thought to be interesting.
]]>In principle, I believe that everything can attract an interesting answer from someone---specially from people like Joel! But while witicisms like «there is no stupid questions, only answers» are witty, there are good questions and bad questions.
I wish someone had asked a question having Joel's answer as an answer...
]]>That said, personally I think your revised question isn't awful, although I think it still admits the trivial answer that there is no natural decomposition of mathematical truth into "theorem" nuggets, and the granularity of a chosen decomposition is just as much (actually, maybe more so!) a product of the social environment of mathematics we work in as the perceived importance of results. There's no "formal" answer to measuring importance that avoids this problem and uses any of the data (e.g. the Mizar graph) you mention.
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