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Any and all textual works can be decried as "lacking exigence", no matter their content.
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Make vague references to "the canon". Do not explain what canon you're talking about.
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Employ words like "ethic (singular)", "schema", "polity". It doesn't matter if you use them correctly, just use them.
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Pick a noun or an adjective to use as a verb. Just give it your own definition and let the audience figure it out.
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Use obtuse definitions of philosophical frameworks, like "it's about bodies moving through space". Do not elaborate or make it easier to tell what the fuck that's supposed to mean.
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If someone is making a good argument that you don't like, say it's "reinforcing teleological norms" and refuse to engage with it any more.
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And, of course, the classic: Anything you don't like is "deeply unserious".
thank u for coming to my ted talk
how do I do the opposite of this? make insightful remarks or speak knowledgeably on a topic and growing closer to them instead of becoming alienated by the effort.
Type in lower case and use maoist standard english
And speak concisely...
silence earnest communicator. a sophist is speaking...