Abstract Theorizing and Language

A bit of linguistics to ponder from Manyul Im:

Now, don’t buy too much into this. The Chinese language does, in fact, accommodate counterfactuals, as numerous critiques of Bloom’s thesis will attest. But the situation discussed here is linguistically interesting.

Counterfactual thinking falls along a spectrum, and all counterfactual thinking involves the use of the creative imagination. I’d characterize more “far out” kind of counterfactual thinking as speculative thinking. That kind of thinking is relatively inconsequential - i.e. it isn’t grounded and is untrustworthy. The example given at the end of your quote is not merely speculative, but is grounded counterfactual thought oriented towards determining the reality of the situation. The imagination in this case is used to enlighten, not to lead astray.

Interesting subject by the way - nice.

Pardon, I know nothing of the Chinese language, so I may be asking strange things. However, I am unable to think of any language which does not hold universals. How exactly does that work in Chinese then? Or better yet: “What is a universal according to you (or the people in the article you cited)”?

:confused: =] =[ (;,:wink: and so on and so forth. These are just a few examples and are far from universal but valid as an argument none the less.