Robarob
Virgin
I can see where the OP is coming from - it's a waste of personal energy to fret about what labels to give yourself when often the way to find out is to learn by experience. However, I feel the presence of the labels is necessary.
The universe tends towards chaos, and humans tend towards order (physicists refer to entropy). It's the reason items in shops are neatly stacked alongside similar things, why lists are able to be sorted, etc. Part of creating that order involves assigning labels to things.
Now this works up to a point. Unfortunately, when detail is required, things start to go wrong. Partly because the labels themselves become inadequate or imprecise, but also because different people have different definitions of the labels. For example, I think of bi-sexual as anything between the two extremes of straight and gay, but not everyone thinks the same way.
As a slightly more obscure example, if someone points and exclaims "louder faggots", are they being oddly rude and extremely un-PC, or encouraging the bassoon players to play louder (or both)?
The universe tends towards chaos, and humans tend towards order (physicists refer to entropy). It's the reason items in shops are neatly stacked alongside similar things, why lists are able to be sorted, etc. Part of creating that order involves assigning labels to things.
Now this works up to a point. Unfortunately, when detail is required, things start to go wrong. Partly because the labels themselves become inadequate or imprecise, but also because different people have different definitions of the labels. For example, I think of bi-sexual as anything between the two extremes of straight and gay, but not everyone thinks the same way.
As a slightly more obscure example, if someone points and exclaims "louder faggots", are they being oddly rude and extremely un-PC, or encouraging the bassoon players to play louder (or both)?


































