Tony with all due respect, it feels like this is just about point scoring with you.
Making a point. The point being that dissociative mechanics are just a rationalization, that they're based on confirmation bias and selectively choosing an interpretation of a rule and a visualization to make it dissociative, and that you can inflict that on any mechanic.
As a criticism, that makes it meaningless.
Perhaps to you me singling out dissociative as the reason for not liking a mechanics is the same as just saying I don't like it.
It's really not. Saying you don't like it is fine. Giving an invalid rationalization in place of a reason, is not. There's no need to give a reason, but if you give one, give an honest one, not one that sound's contrived and disingenuous.
For me I find it useful because it identifies one of the reasons, and I can use this in design and in what games I choose to play.
I feel the need to point out that you're just fooling yourself, there. All you have in dissociative mechanics is a tool for re-enforcing confirmation bias, and confirmation bias is powerful enough already.
My feeling is if you find power attack dissociative then you find it dissociative and that is simply your point of view. Where I may engage you in discussion on it, and where I have, is I don't think it is widely regarded as dissociative.
Of course I don't find Power Attack dissociative. It's just to illustrate that any mechanic can be tagged 'dissociative,' arbitrarily.
People's dislikes do not have to hold up to cross-examination.
Indeed, I just pointed that out. There's no need to justify a dislike. "I just didn't like it," is all the explanation you need.
I'll agree with that every time.
However, if you do choose to justify a dislike, that justification just might be questioned, especially if it seems like you're really reaching just to make a really weak case, and maybe even being a bit disingenuous in constructing it.
I dislike tomatoes. I find the taste of a fresh tomato disgusting. I order all my sandwiches and salads without tomatoes. Yet, I eat salsa, spaghetti sauce, and pizza sauce with no problem despite having tomato as the primary ingredient. You cannot offer me a tomato salad, have me refuse, and then say "you eat tomato sauce, therefore you actually like tomatoes, so eat up!" The same is true of disassociated mechanics
There is one particularly cogent difference: Tomatoes are a real thing, they weren't made up by a blogger in 2008 in an attempt to get McDonalds to stop selling salads.'
Now, if you'd been eating tomatoes your whole life without ever knowing they were there, then read the blog, and suddenly realized why you hated McDonalds salads - but still ate them on Big Macs, even when they were pointed out to you, then you'd have a more nearly valid analogy. Well, except, of course, that tomatoes are real.