▲ | aspenmayer 4 days ago | |||||||
I don’t mean literal guns, I mean literary[0] guns. I feel that we agree, as I originally stated in my first reply, so I apologize if you feel that I’ve wasted your time. My goal was to explain why I think that people leave jobs for higher pay instead of fixing things and getting promoted internally, which I believe was what you mentioned, which is party due to dysfunctional workplaces with footguns without proper safeguards, and in the context of this thread above you, people who have the context may have left the company, temporarily or otherwise, and those who remain to do the work may use LLMs to compensate. [0]> (of language) associated with literary works or other formal writing; having a marked style intended to create a particular emotional effect: the script was too literary. - Oxford English Dictionary | ||||||||
▲ | godelski 4 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
I know the difference. You write literal.
I'm saying a footgun is de facto metaphorical so it is a weird thing to accuse me of being literal. I understand Chekhov's rifle is a different thing, and a literally. I literally demonstrated knowledge of this. I literally stated as such
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