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Luklear t1_j409djr wrote

When you consider how important the meaning of words and the limits of languages are, and how it’s ramifications manifested geographically over history, this becomes especially clear. In order for philosophy to propagate fully it’s authors intent there must be a semantic agreement with the audience. In addition, language procures and inhibits our ability to shape intuition into coherent thought.

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EducatorBig6648 t1_j42uoq1 wrote

>When you consider how important the meaning of words and the limits of languages are

"Importance" is a myth, it exists nowhere but in our imagination.

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"In order for philosophy to propagate fully it’s authors intent there must be a semantic agreement with the audience."

There is nothing there "must" be as "imperatives" are another myth. Even if there being a semantic agreement is/were... essential for philosophy to propagate this would not make "imperatives" a non-myth.

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