Well, it’s one thing not to give details and another to misreport. Even now, as an adult, I say “I am OK” when I mean “things suck”, and “I am great” when things are OK. I just shift them by a degree in the positive direction. Now, if he is unhappy, should he say “I am fine”? If he is not fine, he is lying.
If I’m checking out at a grocery store and the cashier asks me how I am, responding by producing the sequence of phonemes “good” doesn’t really function as a way to put a map of my current well-being in their head; it’s more just for signalling respect etc.
In other words, saying “things suck” would be about as off-topic as if I started putting on a pair of boxing gloves in response to you saying, “Hey, could you help me move these boxes?”
I don’t disagree necessarily, but this is way too subtle for a kid, so it’s not a practical answer.
Besides, as a semi-professional linguist, I must say you are confusing semantics (e.g. your boxes example) with pragmatics which is what we are talking about, where one uses words to mean something other than what the dictionary + propositional logic say they mean. These are often very confusing because they rely on cultural context and both kids and foreigners often screw up when they deal with them.
I don’t disagree necessarily, but this is way too subtle for a kid
Too subtle? This is just one tiny part of growing up and learning to interact with other people. If it’s too subtle for him at this point in his development, then you’ll just have to wait.
so it’s not a practical answer
It’s a practical answer in that it shows why you shouldn’t encourage him to respond like that in those situations. I would have to know a lot more about your kid (and perhaps also way more about parenting) to know whether you should try to discourage it (and how to go about that), but at least we now know that it’s not a virtue in itself, but merely a social misunderstanding.
In other words, you were wondering whether to teach him to “lie” upon these occasions. I’m saying that you definitely shouldn’t do the opposite (express affirmation to him about what he’s doing). That’s useful to know, right? About whether you should go about trying to fix this social misunderstanding though, I don’t know. Is this normal for his age? Is this part of a trend? Will he simply update later with no bumps in the road? Etc.
You could try just telling him that sometimes “how are you” means that they want a long response about whether he’s happy or sad or whatever and why, but sometimes it’s just to be friendly and they don’t want anything more than a quick “good” or “fine” or whatever. In fact, that simple insight might well launch him into a long, fruitful path of social inquiry and analysis for many years to come.
(If he asks how to know which is which and you don’t think you could explain it or he wouldn’t understand you, just say it’s hard to tell but that he’ll get it at some point if he keeps trying.)
Besides, as a semi-professional linguist, I must say you are confusing semantics (e.g. your boxes example) with pragmatics which is what we are talking about, where one uses words to mean something other than what the dictionary + propositional logic say they mean.
How exactly am I confusing those?
These are often very confusing because they rely on cultural context and both kids and foreigners often screw up when they deal with them.
Yes. Actual communication is quite difficult.
(That’s sort of sarcastic or something, but it’s not supposed to convey bad will; I’m simply trying to clarify my position. The attempt is sort of vague though, so I don’t necessarily expect you to know where I’m going with it.)
Well, it’s one thing not to give details and another to misreport. Even now, as an adult, I say “I am OK” when I mean “things suck”, and “I am great” when things are OK. I just shift them by a degree in the positive direction. Now, if he is unhappy, should he say “I am fine”? If he is not fine, he is lying.
I think the same principle applies.
If I’m checking out at a grocery store and the cashier asks me how I am, responding by producing the sequence of phonemes “good” doesn’t really function as a way to put a map of my current well-being in their head; it’s more just for signalling respect etc.
In other words, saying “things suck” would be about as off-topic as if I started putting on a pair of boxing gloves in response to you saying, “Hey, could you help me move these boxes?”
I don’t disagree necessarily, but this is way too subtle for a kid, so it’s not a practical answer.
Besides, as a semi-professional linguist, I must say you are confusing semantics (e.g. your boxes example) with pragmatics which is what we are talking about, where one uses words to mean something other than what the dictionary + propositional logic say they mean. These are often very confusing because they rely on cultural context and both kids and foreigners often screw up when they deal with them.
Too subtle? This is just one tiny part of growing up and learning to interact with other people. If it’s too subtle for him at this point in his development, then you’ll just have to wait.
It’s a practical answer in that it shows why you shouldn’t encourage him to respond like that in those situations. I would have to know a lot more about your kid (and perhaps also way more about parenting) to know whether you should try to discourage it (and how to go about that), but at least we now know that it’s not a virtue in itself, but merely a social misunderstanding.
In other words, you were wondering whether to teach him to “lie” upon these occasions. I’m saying that you definitely shouldn’t do the opposite (express affirmation to him about what he’s doing). That’s useful to know, right? About whether you should go about trying to fix this social misunderstanding though, I don’t know. Is this normal for his age? Is this part of a trend? Will he simply update later with no bumps in the road? Etc.
You could try just telling him that sometimes “how are you” means that they want a long response about whether he’s happy or sad or whatever and why, but sometimes it’s just to be friendly and they don’t want anything more than a quick “good” or “fine” or whatever. In fact, that simple insight might well launch him into a long, fruitful path of social inquiry and analysis for many years to come.
(If he asks how to know which is which and you don’t think you could explain it or he wouldn’t understand you, just say it’s hard to tell but that he’ll get it at some point if he keeps trying.)
How exactly am I confusing those?
Yes. Actual communication is quite difficult.
(That’s sort of sarcastic or something, but it’s not supposed to convey bad will; I’m simply trying to clarify my position. The attempt is sort of vague though, so I don’t necessarily expect you to know where I’m going with it.)