Blue?
my thread = question
your post = answer
which is just another form of a question that answers itself, no?
(yes, but why?)
"what would be something unusual for a fish to do?"
"nothing, because if a fish did it, it would be usual"
"funny how when we say 'would be natural' and 'wouldn't be unnatural', they logically mean the same thing, but hold different real world meaning"
why op opened this thread?
he is experimenting a new lynch-like comment style
yes.
/
"and you may ask yourself, 'how does op know what I mean when i say "lynch-like comment style"?'(isn't that a pretty tricky concept?)". In other words, how can I say yes to your question?"
and yet, I say yes.
yes.
/
"and you may ask yourself, 'how does op know what I mean when i say "lynch-like comment style"?'(isn't that a pretty tricky concept?)". In other words, how can I say yes to your question?"
and yet, I say yes.
for the record, whatever you (yes, you, reading this right now) think this post means, is what it means.
why do you pick at scabs?
1. scab is natural healing process of the body, you shouldn't pick at it and interrupt it.
2. but you are your body
3. so when a scab gets picked, who is doing the scabbing and who is doing the picking? why not say that the will of the body is doing both at once?
'isn't all fashion good fashion?'
(you see, the people wear what they wear anyways)
This feels like if Jaden Smith posted in misc
Its a lil pretentious but it feels kinda nice for my brain for some reason. Like the text form of ASMR. Keep going @op
(a) how do i ask a question?
^this question answers itself
(b) how do i ask a question that answers itself?
^this question, on the surface, does not answer itself
but it does *contain* its answer within itself
[(b) contains (a)]
Its a lil pretentious but it feels kinda nice for my brain for some reason. Like the text form of ASMR. Keep going @op
thx (:
(a) how do i ask a question?
^this question answers itself
(b) how do i ask a question that answers itself?
^this question, on the surface, does not answer itself
but it does *contain* its answer within itself
[(b) contains (a)]
if we start by asking (b), through simple reduction of the question we arrive at its answer, question (a)
of course, this is obvious for the two questions I've come up with, but who's to say this isn't the case for all questions?