Daniel Wigton on Nostr: The forced conclusion is that the original statement, in defiance of your singular ...
The forced conclusion is that the original statement, in defiance of your singular intellect, was in fact illogical.
If we have the proposition "minds think alike" we'd like to draw conclusions as to quality of those minds, but the truth is... We can't.
I have got caught in this trap, it was brought on by two people that I considered wholesale idiots using the great minds phrase to congratulate themselves for shared idiocy.
But then I got caught in an endless loop of trying to decide whether great or weak minds were more likely to "think alike"
My 3 decade search for answer only resolved when you introduced average minds to the calculus. For that I am forever in your debt.
If we have the proposition "minds think alike" we'd like to draw conclusions as to quality of those minds, but the truth is... We can't.
I have got caught in this trap, it was brought on by two people that I considered wholesale idiots using the great minds phrase to congratulate themselves for shared idiocy.
But then I got caught in an endless loop of trying to decide whether great or weak minds were more likely to "think alike"
My 3 decade search for answer only resolved when you introduced average minds to the calculus. For that I am forever in your debt.