Admit it. Consensus is your enemy. Smugness is your friend. — schopenhauer1
That is probably just because the rest of the people don't know them. If they did they would probably perceive that person to be aggravating as well — Sir2u
As if "being aggravating" were an objective, inherent characteristic of a person, and have nothing to do with the way two people interact with one another? — baker
I infer that this is what you're saying. Esp. when you put it like that:As if "being aggravating" were an objective, inherent characteristic of a person, and have nothing to do with the way two people interact with one another?
— baker
Did I say anything about that? — Sir2u
But to be truthful, when "some" People find another person aggravating it is because of some trait or characteristic they have that is the cause. It would be logical to suppose that other would find that person to be aggravating for the same reason.
Most people do not have "being aggravating" as an objective but it is usually a inherent part of then.
Do you think that if Tom thinks Dick is aggravating, this has nothing in any way to do with Tom? — baker
And that Tom is completey helpless in the face of Dick's aggravation? Ie. that if Tom is in Dick's presence, Tom will become aggravated, and there's nothing Tom can do about that? — baker
Of course it has something to do with them both. One has a low tolerance for a specific characteristic of the other. For example, I have a low tolerance for people that ask pointless questions, therefore those that have a tendency to do that irritate me. — Sir2u
So you neither feel nor take any responsibility for how you feel about (and react to) others. — baker
It must be terrible to have one's state of mind so affected/directed by others. — baker
So what? If they don't think they are arseholes, they are wrong, in denial?But then decides that they are both arseholes — Sir2u
I'm saying that other people don't have characteristics that would exist or have relevance regardless of the observer. — baker
Also, "aggravating" is not the same kind of personal characteristic like "Caucasian". — baker
You're externalizing, you talk of other people as if you're the one who decides who they really are or what is true about them. — baker
You use you-messages, not I-messages. Most people are like that. But it still makes for very low quality interactions. — baker
One can always talk about one's own perceptions and formulate one's verbal expressions accordingly. It's a whole other world of interacting with people.I am really sorry to say that this makes no sense. If people don't have characteristic that would exist regardless of the observer then there is nothing to talk about here. — Sir2u
That's not the difference I'm talking about.Also, "aggravating" is not the same kind of personal characteristic like "Caucasian".
— baker
Both are descriptive of people, one is physical the other is personality. Did you just figure that out or do you think I am not able to recognize the difference.
In the way you formulate your statements.You're externalizing, you talk of other people as if you're the one who decides who they really are or what is true about them.
— baker
Exactly where did I say something like that?
Except that you don't formulate it as your thought, as your opinion, but as if it were an objective fact about the other person.I am the one that decides what I think about them, or is that not obvious to you?
Have you read the link?You use you-messages, not I-messages. Most people are like that. But it still makes for very low quality interactions.
— baker
Again I do not understand what you are trying to say. Maybe you could give an example of what I have said that makes you think something like this.
Whether someone is Caucasian or not is not up to you (except if you were in some racial identity comission or some such). — baker
But whether someone "is" aggravating or not is 1. up to you, and 2. how you interact with that person. — baker
In the way you formulate your statements.
As if "Tom is aggravating" would ontologically and epistemologically be the same type of statement as "A cube has 6 surfaces." — baker
except that you don't formulate it as your thought, as your opinion, but as if it were an objective fact about the other person. — baker
Have you read the link? — baker
You said things like "this makes no sense", "people that ask pointless questions". You didn't say "I don't understand this" (until now, after all my trying to change the mode of the conversation). — baker
Will the irony never end! — baker
Anyway, I'd like to see the OP's reply -- ↪schopenhauer1
! -- that's why I posted in this thread to begin with. — baker
No, I was discussing an epistemological issue. — baker
Admit it. Consensus is your enemy. Smugness is your friend. — schopenhauer1
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