top | item 19519772

(no title)

eponeponepon | 7 years ago

The Orwell comparisons may seem trite to you, but the fact is that if there's no available word for a thing, it becomes difficult for people at large to discuss it.

Some organisations conclude that if the masses can't name a thing, then it's impossible for anyone to think of it, and that this makes it go away. Personally I think this underestimates individual people's capacity to think up new names for things, and is therefore doomed to failure.

discuss

order

benj111|7 years ago

"Personally I think this underestimates individual people's capacity to think up new names for things, and is therefore doomed to failure"

Agreed, so I'm not sure why you're disagreeing?

I only mentioned it, to show I understand the wider context, so when I ask "why?" I don't get a load of "because censorship" answers. So not intended to come across as trite.

eponeponepon|7 years ago

I'm not disagreeing :-)