I spoke about an example from Radical Honesty. That’s not really a conlang but simply a way to use the English language
Sorry, I misunderstood. But I think the same question can be asked even if it isn’t a language. “You are angry” must be expressed using words that recognize that you are making a conclusion about someone’s anger. Must similar sentences about other conclusions be expressed that way? Or does this requirement apply only to “you are angry” while there is no requirement for “I conclude my car is out of gas” or “I deduce that you are motivated by friendship”?
I have read about radical honesty multiple times on the internet and didn’t saw the point of it. I only saw the point when I meet a person who actually lives according to the philosophy, even when that means that it makes certain situations more challenging.
The core rule of radical honesty isn’t: You have to say “I imagine”, “I conclude” or “I deduce”.
The core rule is that you speak the truth and when you judge another person you don’t hold the judgement back but speak it out. Empirically that’s easier when the statement is softened by “I imagine”.
Sorry, I misunderstood. But I think the same question can be asked even if it isn’t a language. “You are angry” must be expressed using words that recognize that you are making a conclusion about someone’s anger. Must similar sentences about other conclusions be expressed that way? Or does this requirement apply only to “you are angry” while there is no requirement for “I conclude my car is out of gas” or “I deduce that you are motivated by friendship”?
I have read about radical honesty multiple times on the internet and didn’t saw the point of it. I only saw the point when I meet a person who actually lives according to the philosophy, even when that means that it makes certain situations more challenging.
The core rule of radical honesty isn’t: You have to say “I imagine”, “I conclude” or “I deduce”. The core rule is that you speak the truth and when you judge another person you don’t hold the judgement back but speak it out. Empirically that’s easier when the statement is softened by “I imagine”.