. Having a pattern of “Do you want to do it?”, “No”, “Wrong. Do you want to do it?”,”no”, “Wrong. Do you want to do it”, “Maybe”, is not an expression of enthusiastic consent.
To me it’s very hard to imagine such an exchange without the participants knowing the words that are spoken.
The analog starts to get a little far but I can imagine atleast two scenarios where atleast half of the interaction doesn’t consist of words.
First one. Somebody hitting their TV until it starts working again. The TV sure as hell doesn’t know what the interaction is about. As hitter projecting anger into the situation is a common cognitive fallacy, but low percentage of the time is is a way to wiggle out of the error state of not having a working TV.
Another would be an exchange like “that *itch”, “ermh...”,”witch”, “ermh”,”girl”,”erhm”, “woman”. Is the one doing discouragement on the connotation requesdting a reformulation or neutrally rejecting a wrong answer? It doesn’t involve an established word and it can involve stuff like eye rolling and stuff that is harder to delineate into deiscrete chuncks. This would be a instance of clever hans as the formulator doesn’t need to know what PC-filter is appropriate for the situation.
To me it’s very hard to imagine such an exchange without the participants knowing the words that are spoken.
The analog starts to get a little far but I can imagine atleast two scenarios where atleast half of the interaction doesn’t consist of words.
First one. Somebody hitting their TV until it starts working again. The TV sure as hell doesn’t know what the interaction is about. As hitter projecting anger into the situation is a common cognitive fallacy, but low percentage of the time is is a way to wiggle out of the error state of not having a working TV.
Another would be an exchange like “that *itch”, “ermh...”,”witch”, “ermh”,”girl”,”erhm”, “woman”. Is the one doing discouragement on the connotation requesdting a reformulation or neutrally rejecting a wrong answer? It doesn’t involve an established word and it can involve stuff like eye rolling and stuff that is harder to delineate into deiscrete chuncks. This would be a instance of clever hans as the formulator doesn’t need to know what PC-filter is appropriate for the situation.
The analog starts to get a little far but I can imagine atleast two scenarios where atleast half of the interaction doesn’t consist of words.
Of course if the interaction is not about words then it’s not important that the participants of the inteactions understand words.