Yeah I am okay with experts using jargon to expedite communication, I guess where I have an issue is when communication bogs down when one party decides to deliberately complicate their language. Reducing the bandwidth of information transfer between two parties fro arbitrary reasons seems rather useless. — rlclauer
A suggestion: turn the thread into case studies. While reading other threads come back with what you consider obfuscatory language in a quote, plus a link so we can see the context. I doubt we will all agree, but I think specifics will tease out at least the different criteria. And we can actually test out the critieria.
One criterion seems to be: there is a simpler way to say it. We can see if the examples pass this test. For example. — Coben
On the idea of the correct-ness of concepts:
Concepts are nothing but half a relational proposition, from which a cognition becomes possible, the other half herein being beyond the scope. Whether or not a concept relates to its object is the purview of judgement. It follows that any error in cognition, or even if a cognition can be given, is the fault of judgement, and has nothing to do with whether or not the concept in use is correct in itself, but only has to do with whether or not it is itself the correct concept to use. — Mww
Thanks. I've read it a few times. I wonder if it might be a failure to communicate well rather than obfuscatory discourse. Now, those are not mutually exclusive terms, but I say this because for me the words he uses and not problematic in and of themselves - iow given my comfort level with the terms. It doesn't strike me, now, asThe username under the quote is a link to the discussion. — S
when communication bogs down when one party decides to deliberately complicate their language — rlclauer
Concepts are nothing but half a relational proposition, from which a cognition becomes possible, the other half herein being beyond the scope. Whether or not a concept relates to its object is the purview of judgement. It follows that any error in cognition, or even if a cognition can be given, is the fault of judgement, and has nothing to do with whether or not the concept in use is correct in itself, but only has to do with whether or not it is itself the correct concept to use. — Mww
I won't allow myself to euthanaze and now I'm not even allowed to euphemize??? — Janus
Better to pass them away painlessly and gently. — PoeticUniverse
There is a link to a pdf by Graff, which is a paper he wrote about the fact that academia has an unjustified culture of obtuse and obfuscatory communication styles. This is not just limited to overly-jargonized communication to other specialists in a narrow field, but also to general academic discourse and literature, which is written in esoteric manners, which are often inaccessible to general audiences.
The general thrust of the paper is that this is an unnecessary addition to the academic process. — rlclauer
My personal take on this situation, is that even in philosophical conversations, the likes of which occur in this forum, can become overly pedantic and obtuse — rlclauer
While I am in general agreement, one's level of education must be taken into consideration. What may seem to be clearly stated to someone with the requisite knowledge of the subject matter may sound like nonsense to someone who is not familiar with the terminology and issues. If one wishes to discuss the work of philosophers then one needs to move beyond the level of ordinary discourse, which does not adequately address such matters. — Fooloso4
Titles thread: "Obfuscatory Discourse". — StreetlightX
As to the OP, I think language can be arcane, and there may be poetic value in that, if it makes you think, put effort into interpreting what is written, and think differently. Some complex allusive ideas cannot be translated into simple "literal" language without any loss of conceptual richness. Of course if you have no taste for poetry then you won't like a lot of "continental" philosophy. I like to say that in philosophy there are two main traditions: there is the Anal Tradition and the Incontinent Tradition; the retentive and the expressive. — Janus
Some complex allusive ideas cannot be translated into simple "literal" language without any loss of conceptual richness. — Janus
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.