That’s exactly the definition of ambiguity – whatever a person is compelled to do is whatever a person is compelled to do.
The situation says nothing until beforehand or afterward in context, until it is discussed and made sense of, otherwise we’re just being. Actions speak louder than words, yes, but what are we doing here on this forum – acting or writing? Where do word acts begin and end? Is this even the problem at hand?
The hypothetical is a memory of something that may or may not be real, according to fiction or nonfiction. Predicating events based on hypothetical contexts are what men instinctively do in order to anticipate the exchange of gunfire. The hypothetical can be true when what is “true” is definitely going to happen (like that I’m going to drive my car within the next two hours).
I want some clarification…
Skepticism & Nihilism continually beg the question. Pragmatism ends it, so it also forces men to decide what is “valid” and what is “invalid”.
It’s only as flawed as flawed men allow it to be. The fallacy of logicians (and most other logically predicated sciences) is that they don’t know how, where, or when to update their language after mistaking it as an absolute authority. I won’t speak for others, but my authority rests in the same place I put my faith…