I am sure I am being stupid, but can you give me a non-art example of this? Or do you mean stuff like the word "red" cannot capture everything we experience when we see "red"...ugh, I hope it is not that as that example NEVER causes confusion in a conversation. I have never had someone question what I meant when I said "red". — ZhouBoTong
What do you make of it? Is it meaningless to you? If so, do you think you would not be able understand it if you were familiar with the central ideas of the philosophers Heidegger and Hegel he refers to? If you do understand it, do you think what it is saying could have somehow been expressed in simpler, more "literal" language, and if so, without any loss of quality? — Janus
pure pedantic garbage...right? It says NOTHING, right? I understand all of the words...but maybe their sum is greater than the parts? You have also pulled a random passage out of context, which may be why I am not picking up the full meaning.The subject dealt with here is manifestly in the air. — Janus
I am not sure I even know what exactly they are saying here ("for example"? or "we know this is true because"? or "there are signs that we can record"? - the last one seems most direct, but as this passage is out of context, I can't say for sure (and if the last one right, why is it being said at all?). Seems a poor use of language.The signs may be noted: — Janus
Heidegger's more and more pronounced orientation towards a philosophy of ontological Difference; — Janus
the structuralist project, — Janus
based upon a distribution of differential characters within a space of coexistence; — Janus
What do you make of it? — Janus
Is it meaningless to you? — Janus
If so, do you think you would not be able understand it if you were familiar with the central ideas of the philosophers Heidegger and Hegel he refers to? I — Janus
Isn't vocabulary the biggest obfuscatator? — ZhouBoTong
↪Fooloso4 I do agree with you, — removedmembershiprc
↪Terrapin Station I do not disagree — removedmembershiprc
Yes, that too! — Fooloso4
hat was expressed in familiar language (using words ranked in the most frequent 25% of the English corpus of 172,000 words -- that's still about 43.000 possible words -- or would you like to read texts composed with many of the least frequently used words (like cenacle) and freely borrowing from languages with which you are not familiar? — Bitter Crank
Hardly. Presumed knowledge, unarticulated concepts, allusive references, condensed presentation of reasoning and so on do far more to make a work hard to read than any 'big vocabulary'. — StreetlightX
is that this thread is complete total ignorant bullshit. — god must be atheist
But most communication, most of the time, should be communicated with the goal of being understood by as many as possible. — ZhouBoTong
haha, I feel like almost everyone is discussing a slightly different version of the same topic. If we each are visualizing a different scenario where complicated language is used, how can we agree on the usage? — ZhouBoTong
solve, say, the Riemann hypothesis — StreetlightX
Prove, apologies. — StreetlightX
Absolutely not. If you have a paper trying to solve, say, the Riemann hypothesis, the goal of that paper is to solve the Riemann hypothesis, — StreetlightX
I thought that complicated language is not the issue, but the usage of esoteric words. — god must be atheist
but the only exception I can find is legal documents. — god must be atheist
But outside the ivory tower (hehe, I've never sounded so Republican before), there are very few subjects that can not be easily, simply, and clearly explained. — ZhouBoTong
There is a space, a necessary one, for things to be hard-going. Not everything should be made easy, as though a matter of principle. — StreetlightX
solve, say, the Riemann hypothesis — StreetlightX
Hypotheses are not to be solved. In math and logic, they are taken as assumptions, as givens, as accepted as true. — god must be atheist
The basic rule of philosophical writing is: respect the intelligence of your reader as you would your own. If you find yourself being asked to to 'explain like you would to a child' to another fully grown human being, then you may as well be asking them to go intellectually fuck themselves. If you don't ask something of your reader, if you don't attempt to wrest their mind from torpor ever so slightly, you may as well not bother. Become a politician or something instead. — StreetlightX
I asked several direct questions that I think would have shed more light on the situation — ZhouBoTong
The subject dealt with here is manifestly in the air. — Janus
pure pedantic garbage...right? It says NOTHING, right? — ZhouBoTong
Firstly I don't think "pedantic" is an appropriate judgement in the context of what we are discussing here. — Janus
Secondly I think it just means that the subject has obviously been much discussed of late ("of late" or "in the air" meaning at the time of writing of course) and so is of present philosophical significance. — Janus
When communicating with other humans that don't have master's or doctorate degrees, are phrases like "the subject is manifestly in the air" effective communication? — ZhouBoTong
If a relatively benign phrase like that seems like too much to you, you shouldn't be studying philosophy. That something is 'in the air' is, if anything, a pretty colloquial expression. — StreetlightX
That something is 'in the air' is, if anything, a pretty colloquial expression. — StreetlightX
you shouldn't be studying philosophy. — StreetlightX
Since disliking unclear communication is a dis-qualifier, is there a test I can take so that I know when I am ready to start studying philosophy? — ZhouBoTong
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. — removedmembershiprc
I think there is a lot of value in a sort of "blue collar philosophy," where the object is clearly communicating ideas in ways which are in line with the common patterns of communication. The objective being transferring information to another person, who very well could be a lay person or a non-specialist, as opposed to posturing as a deeply intellectual savant. — removedmembershiprc
As they say in math, shut up and show your work. No work, no play. — StreetlightX
The Riemann hypothesis is a question that arises under the assumptions of number theory (Dedekind-Peano), or a theory that encompasses it, such as set theory (ZFC). — alcontali
What is the Riemann hypothesis for dummies?
The Riemann Hypothesis states that all non trivial zeros of the Riemann zeta function have a real part equal to 0.5.
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