When we use words, we tend to assume that others are using them in the same way as we are. If they do not, that will cause a problem for understanding and evaluating each other's reasons, or for any sort of communication. But there is plenty of evidence that we usually don't know exactly what words mean. — Jokerlol
When we use words, we tend to assume that others are using them in the same way as we are. If they do not, that will cause a problem for understanding and evaluating each other's reasons, or for any sort of communication. But there is plenty of evidence that we usually don't know exactly what words mean. — Jokerlol
Happy that the 'soup game' captured your interest.
Might also be interesting to debate whether the 'soup game' itself is a game, and what 'ingredients' make a game a game in case. — Stefanog
But there is plenty of evidence that we usually don't know exactly what words mean. — Jokerlol
What we can do is create very high energies for just a few protons and smash them together. The internal guts of the protons are spewed out into a soup of particles similar to conditions shortly after the Big Bang.
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