On Apr 12, 2008, at 1:07 PM, William Conger wrote:
So I want very much to agree with you but even when we use our words as we'd prefer them to be used, we run the certain risk of not telling the truth about our thoujghts. This is where Cheerskep is right, to our everlasting frustration.
Whether we use them correctly or mix them up doesn't mean the distinctions aren't valid and useful, nor does it matter whether we say we use judgment when we use feelings and opinions, as Holmes says. And being inaccurate about how we understand or describe our thoughts is not "not telling the truth": it's being wrong, making an error.
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Michael Brady [EMAIL PROTECTED]
