FreeThinker
DP Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 5, 2006
- Messages
- 1,001
- Reaction score
- 34
- Gender
- Undisclosed
- Political Leaning
- Undisclosed
Whilst standing in my kitchen heating a can of chicken soup, it occurred to me that people on the far right AND the far left always seem to be wrong at some level.
Pondering upon my douchebag english professor reading his own poetry during composition II class today, I realized that since poetry uses ambiguous language to evoke emotions about different events to different people ("what does this poem mean to you?"), that must also be true for ALL spoken language, because poems are just words with structure.
SO...
Right and wrong are relative because the english language is relative. All words have different meanings to different people, therefor nothing can be absolutely true to all people.
Our language is imprecise, and so our sense of truth as well as right and wrong are imprecise.
Is math capable of expressing the world absolutely? Or is it also ambiguous? Are numbers just more words for things that exist beyond 1 and 2 and 3?
Whilst standing in my kitchen heating a can of chicken soup, it occurred to me that people on the far right AND the far left always seem to be wrong at some level.
Whilst standing in my kitchen heating a can of chicken soup, it occurred to me that people on the far right AND the far left always seem to be wrong at some level.
Pondering upon my douchebag english professor reading his own poetry during composition II class today, I realized that since poetry uses ambiguous language to evoke emotions about different events to different people ("what does this poem mean to you?"), that must also be true for ALL spoken language, because poems are just words with structure.
SO...
Right and wrong are relative because the english language is relative. All words have different meanings to different people, therefor nothing can be absolutely true to all people.
Our language is imprecise, and so our sense of truth as well as right and wrong are imprecise.
Is math capable of expressing the world absolutely? Or is it also ambiguous? Are numbers just more words for things that exist beyond 1 and 2 and 3?
In my experience when people know ENOUGH of the facts they support the War on Terror as the President defines it.
The left aren't as much differing in opinion from the right, they are lacking information.
The Right opposes the war now, too.
The Left always did, and now the Right does as well.
Any theories on how that happened?
Did "information" previously possessed by the Right somehow deliquesce and dribble out their ears, or what?
You are mistaken. Why are you mistaken? Refer back to my previous post.
Whilst standing in my kitchen heating a can of chicken soup, it occurred to me that people on the far right AND the far left always seem to be wrong at some level.
Pondering upon my douchebag english professor reading his own poetry during composition II class today, I realized that since poetry uses ambiguous language to evoke emotions about different events to different people ("what does this poem mean to you?"), that must also be true for ALL spoken language, because poems are just words with structure.
SO...
Right and wrong are relative because the english language is relative. All words have different meanings to different people, therefor nothing can be absolutely true to all people.
Our language is imprecise, and so our sense of truth as well as right and wrong are imprecise.
Is math capable of expressing the world absolutely? Or is it also ambiguous? Are numbers just more words for things that exist beyond 1 and 2 and 3?
If that is true, it means that the truth or falsity of the statement "Right and wrong are relative" is also relative, correct?Right and wrong are relative because the english language is relative.
Right and wrong are relative because the english language is relative.
All words have different meanings to different people, therefor nothing can be absolutely true to all people.
Our language is imprecise, and so our sense of truth as well as right and wrong are imprecise.
Knowledge isn't based on language; it is merely communicated through it.
Whilst standing in my kitchen heating a can of chicken soup, it occurred to me that people on the far right AND the far left always seem to be wrong at some level.
Pondering upon my douchebag english professor reading his own poetry during composition II class today, I realized that since poetry uses ambiguous language to evoke emotions about different events to different people ("what does this poem mean to you?"), that must also be true for ALL spoken language, because poems are just words with structure.
SO...
Right and wrong are relative because the english language is relative. All words have different meanings to different people, therefor nothing can be absolutely true to all people.
Our language is imprecise, and so our sense of truth as well as right and wrong are imprecise.
Is math capable of expressing the world absolutely? Or is it also ambiguous? Are numbers just more words for things that exist beyond 1 and 2 and 3?
If you want to find the "message" in communication, realize it is not necessarily "what" people say, it is "why" they said it!
If you want to find the "message" in communication, realize it is not necessarily "what" people say, it is "why" they said it!
You need to be careful here. "How" someone says something could be pre-planned to elicit a specific reaction, which might be the opposite of why they said it. My friends always tell me, whenever they want to get me to do something, they just say, "I can't do it". Then I go into my old brain I'll show you mode.Originally posted by jkille
How they say it can be telling, too, if you're not sure of a person's motivation.
You need to be careful here. "How" someone says something could be pre-planned to elicit a specific reaction, which might be the opposite of why they said it. My friends always tell me, whenever they want to get me to do something, they just say, "I can't do it". Then I go into my old brain I'll show you mode.
I think you had the right idea. "How" someone says something, is the first clue I look at when evaluating what someone just said to me. I wish I would have known this earlier in relationships. But those are a crap-shoot anyway. One of my ex's favorite lines was, "Whata ya mean by that?" Those words would just vomit out of her mouth on just about anything I would say. Or so it seems.Originally posted by jkille
That's true, and many times you can tell that a person is purposefully adjusting their tone to fit an certain attitude or persona. I just thought it was easier than trying to predict the psychological reasons for what people say.
I think you had the right idea. "How" someone says something, is the first clue I look at when evaluating what someone just said to me. I wish I would have known this earlier in relationships. But those are a crap-shoot anyway. One of my ex's favorite lines was, "Whata ya mean by that?" Those words would just vomit out of her mouth on just about anything I would say. Or so it seems.
That is the perspective of someone who believes- fundamentally- that nothing is really wrong with things the way they are.
Or at least not all that wrong.
That society is pretty much a-okay just the way it is, and aside from a little tweaking and fine-tuning, no major changes or reform is really called for.
In other words: you, sir (or ma'am, or whatever), are a centrist. A moderate centrist.
That's why extremists on both sides sound wrong to you.
You don't believe that any extreme measures are called for, because you don't believe that anything really needs to change drastically.
See, I do. And the far right sounds very wrong to me. And the far left sounds compelling, it resonates with me, it sounds very right to me.
Moderates and centrists generally strike me as being complacent and/or apathetic, which also sounds very wrong to me at this juncture.
I don't believe that complacence and apathy are appropriate now, with the world in the state it's in.
But I do understand what you're saying; everyone is different; we're all individuals, coming at this from different perspectives and with unique frames of reference.
Perhaps what sounds like apathy to me might sound like the voice of reason and calm good sense to you.
We're each entitled to our opinion, and to one vote apiece.
I think the poster is mistaking rhetoric and propaganda for "knowledge".
When people believe that if only they had the right words, they could make others change their fundamental beliefs, they are not really thinking in terms of "educating" people or of supplying them with "information".
It doesn't take any special linguistic ability to convey information.
Special linguistic ability is required, however, to wage propaganda campaigns and brainwash the masses.
So I assume that's what the poster is lamenting; the fact that his "communication" skills fall short of being sufficient to this task.
You need to be careful here. "How" someone says something could be pre-planned to elicit a specific reaction, which might be the opposite of why they said it. My friends always tell me, whenever they want to get me to do something, they just say, "I can't do it". Then I go into my old brain I'll show you mode.
I don't think this has anything to do with what I was saying.Originally posted by Free Thinker:
This is the whole pitfall of ambiguous communication. If your friend proved to you mathematically that what you were trying to do was impossible, there would be little reason to ponder over his facial expression or choice of words.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?