Possibly hyperbole - deliberate exaggeration — RussellA
Context insensitivity — Joshs
Context-insensitive expressions are governed by linguistic rules that determine their contents (semantic values), which remain invariant in all contexts of utterance.
Context-insensitive expressions are governed by linguistic rules that determine their contents (semantic values), which remain invariant in all contexts of utterance.
Is that what you meant? — Skalidris
they were choosing to ignore the specific contextual sense of the phrase in favor of a generic meaning — Joshs
the first person would be saying “you’re selfish” and the other would reply “but everyone is selfish”. — Skalidris
they were choosing to ignore the specific contextual sense of the phrase in favor of a generic meaning
— Joshs
Mmmm I don't know, it doesn't seem context related to me. I believe anyone (who likes questioning things) could say "you're selfish" and mean "you're more selfish than average" in any context. — Skalidris
Anti-difference-of-degree-ism — emancipate
“but everyone is selfish”. — Skalidris
I'd call it "equivocation" -- because you both mean different things by "selfish" — Moliere
Suppressed correlative fallacy. — DingoJones
That's bosiness — baker
Anti-difference-of-degree-ism — emancipate
they have a specific contextual reason for making that statement at that time to that person — Joshs
But if you're arguing about whether sciences are more "objective" than human sciences, and that the person says that nothing can be objective anyway, it's still the same context, it's an epistemological context in both cases. — Skalidris
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