Originally posted by stu
Contorting what should be a simple definition into a wordy intellectually academic equivalent to pumping mind iron may well be entertaining but pointless for any clarity, unless perhaps the purpose is to create ambiguity in order to allow one's own opinion to have a value where it may otherwise not be valid.
A definition is no lodger a definition if it is based only upon one's own assumptions. The purpose of a concise explanation of a phrase or word is for a common comprehension so that people may communicate with understanding.
There is a tendency for the intelligentsia of Elite to want to determine how things are and should be. The occasional shallow zeitgeists of this place sometimes come up with some amazingly simple but illuminating insight.
One more thing, if the other side of a trade, or deal MUST lose for you to win, it's a zero sum game.
LOL
Intelligentsia? Nigga please.
Stu, I think you missed my point totally and completely
(deja vu all over again).
The fact that people often have different underlying assumptions, though
they do not realize it, is exactly the point I was trying to make. If we all made the same implicit assumptions, 90% of arguments would never come about in the first place.
It is often the case that if two people violently disagree on 'A', and both of them think their viewpoint on 'A' is obvious and clear as day, then neither has stepped back to realize they have made contrasting assumptions in regards to undiscussed element 'B' which leads to 'A' and catayzes belief in regards to 'A' in the first place.
And yes you are right, the goal is to find common ground. And to find common ground, it is necessary to
dig up and weed out the hidden assumptions that are creating the conflict. We are both trying to get to the same place- clarity of understanding- but you wrongly assume the journey is easy.
And this necessary process- of finding where deeper assumptions are misaligned and then rectifying those misalignments before moving forward- or alternatively agreeing to disagree- is the "overcomplication" that you speak out against. Presuppositions / first assumptions are like the foundations of a building; they have to line up before you can build anything on top of them.
To reverse a wonderfully eloquent phrase from Dan M:
"It's not f--in' simple, it's f---in' complex!"