X-Git-Url: http://unremediatedgender.space/source?p=Ultimately_Untrue_Thought.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=notes%2Fi-tell-myself-notes.txt;h=032754c9cecaaa79cad11837b13b3c9a57b017f0;hp=59c2053eb9b5877183de4fc67ad7c98339dbbd9e;hb=90587a79488dde20d5384ab1e865eccb2473dd70;hpb=338ec413f6605b50bc79ecb9905390c600f95b08 diff --git a/notes/i-tell-myself-notes.txt b/notes/i-tell-myself-notes.txt index 59c2053..032754c 100644 --- a/notes/i-tell-myself-notes.txt +++ b/notes/i-tell-myself-notes.txt @@ -374,8 +374,6 @@ http://zackmdavis.net/blog/2016/07/concerns/ casuistry -Schelling: "One must seek, in other words, a rationalization by which to deny oneself too great a reward from the opponent's concession, otherwise the concession will not be made."'— this was basically what I was hoping to do with "Where to Draw The Boundaries?"—I was hoping to get a victory on _just_ the philosophy-of-language part - Eliezer's NRx 2013 vs. 2019 takes In the English language as it is spoken today, third-person singular gender pronouns _do_ have truth conditions. If a stranger crossing your path is rude to you, you'll say, "What's _her_ problem?" or "What's _his_ problem?" depending on your perception of their secondary sex characteristics.