| ▲ | throwaway27448 2 hours ago | |||||||||||||
Words have more meanings than ever.... but last century produced wittgenstein; perfectly clear communication was always a polite fiction. | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | an0malous an hour ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||
> Words have more meanings than ever Right, that's the problem > but last century produced wittgenstein; I don't think a philosopher who died 80 years ago is driving the change in how words are used in the last 20 years. It has more to do with the Internet and the cultural forces driving people to use hyperbole or make things up to make money in the attention market. This article wouldn't be on HN if it was just about Dua Lipa starting a bookstore, they added "banned" so it would catch peoples attention even if that's basically a lie. > perfectly clear communication was always a polite fiction. The comment I replied to is trying to argue that it's ok to call books "banned" even if they're not banned, because it's like the term "cancelled" which at one point meant someone whose content was actually cancelled but I guess they're suggesting it doesn't mean that anymore either. I'm not arguing that words should have perfect meanings, that is obviously a strawman, but this article and comment thread are using words to mean the complete opposite of their common meaning. | ||||||||||||||
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