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Eric Falden's avatar

This thread was such a trip at the time, but it was a blast trying to throw it all together into a post. Good fun.

Wait, did you understand that? Did I? How will I ever know? What will future archeologists make of our meaningless scribbles? Oh no.

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Scoot's avatar

I still have to get into the weeds here a bit but I think #3 became the issue because Eric's reflex is what I think is either "positivism" or "realism" (both Positivism and Realism agree there is an objective reality, a positivist says it can be measured and accessed, a realist says it doesn't have to be measured or accessed). Ian seems like his reflex is "relativism" or "pragmatism"--that there is no objective reality outside of an observer to perceive it.

So yall thought you were arguing about writing, but really it's two mutually exclusive philosophical worldviews.

Positivism suggests that #3 has some objective quality, once the words depart from the writer, they are their own thing, and #4 is the perception component. #1 and #2 are interior to the author, #3 is the separation of the work from the author, and #4 is the reception by an audience.

Relativism would argue--and have some strong pragmatic ground for arguing--that #3 doesn't exist without #4, the audience. If everyone in the world reads a string of letters one way, how could it have an objective quality independent of that? How could we know?

This is an argument as old as time and yall are hashing the latest iteration of it.

I see you got to a point where you say you agree, but I haven't followed the argument all the way through yet, I just recognized the philosophical terms for your POV's and wanted to share. Another comment to come!

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