Using abstract nouns, adjectives, adverbs, et al.
#16
(11-21-2015, 08:15 AM)shemthepenman Wrote:  
i agree that not all discussion needs to be a debate. although, in a kind of hegelian sense, an original synthesis can come from extreme oppositions.

The more extreme the antithesis, the more ambiguous the synthesis.


(11-21-2015, 08:15 AM)shemthepenman Wrote:  it also depends on what is at stake in the argument. if it is whether or not to mindlessly use abstract nouns in your poem, then debate is just an exercise to hone one's rhetorical dexterity, wakes the brain up, sparks those misfiring synapses, etc. in short, a bit of fun. however, some people may take this issue incredibly seriously, as if disagreeing with them is somehow an offence to the very core of their being-debates of this type are better left well alone, in my experience.

Left well alone?Those serious people are the absolute best ones to have fun with.
One-sided fun, of course,  but that's fine with me as I'm almost always on that side.
(He said dichotomously.)


(11-21-2015, 08:15 AM)shemthepenman Wrote:  the other obvious benefit to debate is the aggression with which an opposing view can crash into the status quo. the opposing opinion need not withstand alternative non-dichotomous discussion, just as long as it damages the gregarious, unquestioned, reason. it is a kind of offensive conceptual short cut. contrarians often use this to great effect.

Parody is an invincible tyrant. Smile


(11-21-2015, 08:15 AM)shemthepenman Wrote:  with these exceptions aside, in general people are just lazy when it comes to thinking, and usually get swept along with their own opinions. once they have the idea that, for example, social networking isn't (or is) good for society (based on some incidental personal experience or whatnot), then they rarely question it any further. or, alternatively, they like the sound of a phrase they once came up with years ago down the pub, that got majority nods from the drunks at the bar, and they hang onto it for dear life, and think they must be a latter-day marx, spitting troofs like it ain't no thang.

god, i'm bored. :/

Ain't that the troof. Elitism is underrated (the same as intelligence just gets you in more trouble).

Take heart, it's better to be figuratively bored than physically bored.
                                                                                                                a brightly colored fungus that grows in bark inclusions
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RE: Using abstract nouns, adjectives, adverbs, et al. - by rayheinrich - 11-21-2015, 03:59 PM



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