You are analyzing an observed / remembered reaction to a sudden, intense traumatic event in the leisurely comfort of our philosophy forum and over-thinking it. — Bitter Crank
If there's the slightest dissonance among the instruments what emerges is cacophony/noise. — TheMadFool
a little dissonance can add a great deal--as many a composer has found. — Bitter Crank
But the higher-lower brain dissonance I refer to is not ''little''. — TheMadFool
In the case of our brains the disharmony is fundamental. Inconsistencies arising in the lower brain directly threaten the very essence of our higher brains - rationality. — TheMadFool
In the case of our brains the disharmony is fundamental. Inconsistencies arising in the lower brain directly threaten the very essence of our higher brains - rationality. — TheMadFool
So. There was no chance of them dying. What were they whinging about, then? Or, had they been here, whining about?
When "hwinan" became "whinen" in Middle English, it meant "to wail distressfully"; "whine" didn't acquire its "complain" sense until the 16th century. "Whinge," on the other hand, comes from a different Old English verb, "hwinsian," which means "to wail or moan discontentedly." — Bitter Crank
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