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by supersrdjan
706 days ago
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The introduction to the article denies its main point: > If writing down your ideas always makes them more precise and more complete, then no one who hasn't written about a topic has fully formed ideas about it. It’s a logical error. It’s like saying: people who point out logical errors in internet comments look foolish, therefore no one who hasn’t done that looks foolish. Clearly there are other ways to look foolish. So even if writing always clarified thought, it’s wrong to infer it’s impossible to have clear thoughts without writing. But since the writer here committed this mistake, he demonstrated that writing does not always result in clear thought. Incidentally, I wrote this comment to clarify my thoughts . |
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Or, say, people who have caught a Snorlax have more Pokemon, therefore no one who hasn't caught a Snorlax has all the Pokemon.
This assumes that there's such a thing as a "fully formed idea" (which means an exception to "always" - you can't clarify your thoughts more and more by writing about them forever). If there isn't, it's still true, but it's not saying a whole lot.