completely blanking on them seems indicative of immature understanding.
Or of question ambiguity. If the word exists on many layers, and they’re not sure which one you’re asking about, they might get stuck there. I notice that I mostly agree with your questions (a ‘statistic’ and ‘money’ are both fairly crisp ideas that have a clear use in their respective fields, and so even just pointing at what they’re used for is a decent definition), but that bramflake’s suggestions all seem problematic.
“Money” is a vague idea. It’s defined as something that can be traded for goods and services, but everything can be. It’s just a question of how quickly, reliably, and consistently it can be done. Out of necessity, economists have given precise definitions of “money”. At least six of them.
Sort of? The sentence that immediately follows seems precise enough to me, and is the same idea (though different words) than the definition I had in mind. If someone jumps to, say, “root of all evil” or “shared fiction” instead of “trade,” that does seem informative about their blowhard-nature.
Or of question ambiguity. If the word exists on many layers, and they’re not sure which one you’re asking about, they might get stuck there. I notice that I mostly agree with your questions (a ‘statistic’ and ‘money’ are both fairly crisp ideas that have a clear use in their respective fields, and so even just pointing at what they’re used for is a decent definition), but that bramflake’s suggestions all seem problematic.
“Money” is a vague idea. It’s defined as something that can be traded for goods and services, but everything can be. It’s just a question of how quickly, reliably, and consistently it can be done. Out of necessity, economists have given precise definitions of “money”. At least six of them.
Sort of? The sentence that immediately follows seems precise enough to me, and is the same idea (though different words) than the definition I had in mind. If someone jumps to, say, “root of all evil” or “shared fiction” instead of “trade,” that does seem informative about their blowhard-nature.