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Jsiajwbanakaksbsbsvc t1_it4fpy6 wrote

Email your professors right now and ask them whether there is a telos history.

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heatfins t1_it4fz8v wrote

Rejecting your intentionally dishonest premise that I made any sort of statement on whether there was telos in history or not, but rather a statement about linguistic use of a used word.

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Jsiajwbanakaksbsbsvc t1_it4g4iy wrote

Linguistic use of a word that implies direction. Progressive is inherently teleological.

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heatfins t1_it4hnvw wrote

You’re still on this. I made it very clear that rejecting a word that is CONSISTENTLY USED IN AND OUTSIDE OF ACADEMIA, with NO REAL ACADEMIC DEBATE OVER ITS USE (academic debate over the use of progressive is what you answered to and went on about telos because you only know how to reply in bad faith) is simply trolling. If you want to have a conversation about policy but refuse to use the lexicon as it is defined because of personal reasons, that’s fine, but you made a decision not to have any conversations with anyone other than those who already agree with your point about USE of the word (that all of academia disagrees with you on). If that’s your prerequisite go troll someone else, but to start claiming you’re “truly curious” while essentially deviating the entire conversation so others have to use your personal vocabulary is weird as fuck.

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heatfins t1_it4g3d2 wrote

What’s the point of always replying in bad faith? I honestly don’t understand what you get out of this other than feeling the satisfaction of trolling someone else.

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Jsiajwbanakaksbsbsvc t1_it4gb7m wrote

I’m not. I’m serious about what I am saying. I’m more curious than anything as to what you think because we have such widely different conceptions of policy. I’m truly trying to understand where is the hole in my reasoning.

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heatfins t1_it4gn2b wrote

Ah we’re not. If I used the word progressive the way it means what it means in policy and your argument is to put the word in a vacuum (no words exist in a vacuum) then say the word is objectively useless, and then purposely misunderstand an argument about academia to make it about telos vs the word. That is simply not what someone who is curious does. This is either called arguing in bad faith or having a cognitive disorder.

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Jsiajwbanakaksbsbsvc t1_it5pqgi wrote

Words have meaning, not all meanings are universally agreed upon. You’re ignoring everything I’ve said so far. Are you by any chance borrowing from this progressive definition?

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