• Jax@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Huh, it’s like I’m reading something my nephew wrote. He has a tendency to only read the first few sentences, skim through the story, and come back to his conclusions based on those first few sentences.

    • Clent@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      You would be wrong.

      I’ve read the article a couple times now trying to understand why this resonates so hard with some people.

      I have tried to bring up what I feel are valid points and the responses are not engaging with what I’ve discussed but acting like I lack the ability to understand.

      I get that attacking me is easier than addressing my points; I have the social skills of a software engineer after all.

      I like code because there is no arguing. It’s just math.

      People on other hand are caught up in emotions and ego, creating anecdotes to fit their biases.

      I can’t fix the tangled mess of the human mind, but I can fix the crazy spaghetti code those type of people create.

      • Jax@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        Firstly, anecdotes aren’t “created”. Anecdotes happen. The reason a singular anecdote isn’t accepted as fact is because without a pattern between isolated incidents there is no way to prove that an anecdote is not simply another isolated incident.

        Things like this, needing to explain this concept is why I think you don’t understand. Your knowledge of English is clearly rudimentary, and you use words you don’t understand to explain concepts you understand less.

        It is of no surprise to me that someone who doesn’t know how to communicate simultaneously doesn’t see the value in good communication. You are cog, cogs are not required to do anything beyond what they do.