We naturally try to conform to the crowd, strength in numbers etc. — Daniel Duffy
Is that empathy a learned response to maintain group cohesion? I’m not saying I believe that’s the case, but biologically, is empathy a symptom of that cohesion? — Daniel Duffy
Yes, I'd say one is better than another, to me (being a multilingual). One is good for daily spoken language, but not for writing a powerful declamation. Another is writing comedy -- I would have to switch the style or even the type of comedy with one language, and use another style and topic if using another language.For me it is clear that languages are different and that if there is a difference then one is to be better than another. — I like sushi
(I shouldn't say "better" -- it is politically and culturally unacceptable to say this). — L'éléphant
German clearly impacts Germans too. There language is particularly literal and every european I spoke to living in Berlin remarked about how literal Germans were as the most significant cultural difference. — I like sushi
One is good for daily spoken language, but not for writing a powerful declamation. — L'éléphant
Do we native English speakers use these common phrases because French better conveys the meaning, or are we just accustomed to it by this point? — Daniel Duffy
I think that because it was reported in the field by a linguist. Sicilians do not use future tense and are widely regarded as being short-sighted/fun-loving. — I like sushi
If you lack use of tenses (like Sicilians) then you are less likely to plan ahead — I like sushi
German clearly impacts Germans too. There language is particularly literal and every european I spoke to living in Berlin remarked about how literal Germans were as the most significant cultural difference. — I like sushi
it is backwards in terms of sentence structure and adjective compared to others for a start — I like sushi
I was wasting my time it seems. Not even got going yet.
Guess this is how things are now here.
Bye bye :) — I like sushi
I was wasting my time it seems. Not even got going yet.
Guess this is how things are now here.
Bye bye — I like sushi
So if this response I'm now providing could have been stated before, why did others (myself included) throw a little ridicule your way? It's twofold I guess. The first is that the debate wasn't taken seriously by those who already knew the answer, but who would have only taken it seriously if there were someone somewhere taking seriously the thesis you're advancing, which could have only been shown by citing to some article or some new school of thought on the issue. The second is that posters (including myself) are not always arriving with an educational temperment when we post, but instead arrive with a combative, adversarial approach, which is understandable as well, as the bulk of us are ornery middle aged men overly connected to our computers. — Hanover
If some are, then trivially so.Are some natural languages more logical than others though? — I like sushi
I don't find it so (though I've never been fluent). As far as I can tell, Goethe's verse isn't "more logical" than Shakespeare's and Hegel's metaphysics is far more opague than C.S. Peirce's.As I said with German do you think that is more logical?
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