| • Science | • People | • Locations | • Timeline |
By far the most common problem in discourse since the Enlightenment is the assumption of the existence of a God's eye view. That is, assuming that a single perspective can be selected and consistently applied to all events, without needing to take into account the varying point of view of many cognitive beings moving through time and the fusion of this into one, omniscient, unified, perception of what "is" (see E Prime for General Semantics' solution to this problem). In the context of writing, this view it is called the omniscient narratorIn literature, an omniscient narrator is a narrator who appears to know everything about the story being told, including what all the characters are thinking. Stories told by an omniscient narrator are usually narrated in the third person; in other words,, who appears to know everything about the story being told, including what all the characters are thinking, and usually speaks in the third person, in other words no character is referred to as 'I' or 'you' except in dialogue.
In an ethical sentence as often formed in law, a subject-object problem is particularly serious, as someone's actual fate may depend on the impression people get from the communication.
For example, the concept of guiltGuilt is a concept used in various ways in various contexts. In psychology and ordinary language, guilt is simply a negative affective state in which one experiences regret at having done something one believes one "should not" have done. Guilt and its ca in the sentence "You are guilty" is not the same as the sentence "I am guilty", since guilt can be admitted (by the guilty) very directly, but cannot be assigned by another so directly, as this is a power relationship (see also hierarchyA hierarchy (Greek hieros sacred, arkho rule) is a system of ranking and organizing things. Different fields use the word in slightly different ways, but a particular definition (below) captures the core of almost all uses. Originally, "hierarchy" meant "). So if in a single paragraph one were to confuse the two quite different concepts of guilt, treating them as equivalents and drawing inferences on that assumption, then that paragraph would have a serious subject-object problem, even if the sentences themselves taken individually did not. Philosophy of lawPhilosophy of law is a branch of philosophy and jurisprudence which studies basic questions about law and legal systems, such as "what is the law?", "what are the criteria for legal validity?", "what is the relationship between law and morality?", and man is especially concerned with details of such issues.