Jackson
Heidegger and Derrida are the main two I’ve come across. Both use several pages to say something they could’ve said in one. I can kind of forgive Derrida though as he is actively looking at this very thing in his writing. I still think he did himself moe harm than good by purposefully trying to be obscure. — I like sushi
Hillary
Jackson
Take your reader by the hand and imagine her/him to be a friend. Once in a while address him/her as "dear reader". Make them part of the story, let them feel the cold, see the colors, understand the theories you use, meet the gods you describe, feel the struggle, and experience the storm and lightning. Give them a book that absorbs them and leaves left of the.a puddle of water only. — Hillary
ArmChairPhilosopher
Another point of discussion is: what is the most effective way to write possible? — Joseph Walsh
Agent Smith
Write so that it would be understandable to a reasonably intelligent 10 year-old. — Terrapin Station
Agent Smith
gobbledygook — Joseph Walsh
ArmChairPhilosopher
While others have given valuable tips on how to wield a pen like a pro, I'm more interested in what some here identify as incoherent speech/writing which in your book is gobbledygook. That's the psychologist in me I guess - such speech/text are considered a hallmark of insanity. — Agent Smith
Agent Smith
"As the ego cogito, subjectivity is the consciousness that represents something, relates this representation back to itself, and so gathers with itself."
Martin Heidegger — ArmChairPhilosopher
Hillary
ArmChairPhilosopher
Muchas gracias for a sample of Heidegger. One needs to be extra cautious when diagnosing incoherence in translations though - much is lost in translation. — Agent Smith
Agent Smith
I can assure you that he makes as much sense in German. — ArmChairPhilosopher
There's a thin line between genius and insanity. I have erased this line. — Oscar Levant
ArmChairPhilosopher
Are Germans cuckoo? :chin: — Agent Smith
T Clark
I'm currently reading a children's book on philosophy. — Agent Smith
Agent Smith
T Clark
Philosophy A Visual Encyclopedia — Agent Smith
bert1
I would like to know because my writing tends to come across that way. — Joseph Walsh
jgill
I'm currently reading a children's book on philosophy — Agent Smith
Agent Smith
Post a few excerpts please. Looks interesting. :chin: — jgill
Hillary
Have you heard of the infinite monkey theorem? — Agent Smith
Hillary
Agent Smith
No offense AS! I read that, according to you, we might be young chimps and now that we might be monkeys. So, monkey business. — Hillary
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