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Cake day: June 13th, 2023

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  • banana_tree@lemmy.mltoComics@lemmy.ml*Permanently Deleted*
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    8 months ago

    Granted idk how it works in theravada which i assume this is about but it’s weird that you’d achieve things once you stop desiring them. Seems like orientalist/new age weirdness. Like a reverse law of attraction or something. Happiness isn’t the end goal nor the result of letting go of attachments.

    Maybe its the way this comic was written but its more than a little ironic that people on here are so lib-brained that they understand the buddhist conception of letting go as a matter of morality





  • Impressively the babbel article manages to include other commons myths like implying english is some kind of mix language rather than a germanic one when it says “This is largely due to invasions of England by the Vikings and then the Normans” about why English supposedly has more words than other languages. This type of incorporation of loanwords is common in almost all big languages.

    It argues based on dictionaries and effectively debunks why you can’t (for comparison I’d like to add that the SAOB of the Swedish Academy lists circa 500k words).

    There’s nothing in this article that says English has the most words other than “So, while English is a clear contender for having the most words and German and Turkish have a large capacity for infinite combinations, all languages end up influencing others.” Still, there’s no justification for the “clear contender” bit other than the Oxford dictionary having more words than Larousse and Littré.

    Feels to me like the article just reinforces the notion (and reality) that you can’t even make comparisons like that.

    Nevermind the fact that this idea is a well known myth in linguistics and arguing against it is kind of like arguing against flat earth theory.