IDK, man. This contribution rings a bit hollow. Jargon, insider jokes and 
words, etc. all serve group cohesion. Coming from Nick, who sporadically talks 
of FriAM as important *as a group*, including attempts to formulate some 
threads as coherent presentable things, it seems good, generalized/popularized, 
communication is antithetic.

But it *does* bode well for treating forum posts as public essays rather than 
intra-group chatting ... which I've argued is the case. A flaw in my argument, 
that those who disagree with me have yet to point out, is that despite being 
publicly available on Nabble, it's not really a public forum. It's not widely 
read. We *do* use obComplexity jargon just to titillate each other. Etc. 
Perhaps the biggest obstacle to viewing these posts as public essays is that we 
don't have a standard set of rules (like Frank's) posts are expected to follow.

So, the classical mathetists among us will argue that you can't have your cake 
and eat it. Either we're a group of insiders, a tribe, or this is a publication 
medium which should have some associated rules. Perhaps that's the paradox 
Nick's after?

On 1/26/21 10:19 AM, [email protected] wrote:
> This correspondence has been an example of it self.  Narcissism is the enemy 
> of communication. 
> 
> I suppose there is SOME sense in putting obscurities in email blasts to the 
> list and clasping to your bosom anybody who happens to understand you. (I did 
> that with my recent supervenience post and got one answer that was 
> tremendously helpful)  It’s like hitchhiking, then;  you only need one ride.  
> But while it makes some sense, as a general strategy of communication,  isn’t 
> it a bit pathetic, after all? Isn’t there some paradox in communication that 
> is designed to be exclusive?


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