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Old 04-12-2021, 03:35 AM
weareunity weareunity is offline
Ascender
Join Date: Jan 2017
Posts: 773
 
Hello Hitesh. Hope you are well.

A question which may have some bearing upon what is actually being protected when proponents of different b's and p's seek to assert the validity of their "own" b's and p's as opposed to the b's and p's of others could be constructed sthg like:---

How comfortable are we---generally speaking--- with being thought "incorrect"--that is to say, in the eyes of others ? (As distinct from the practical consequences of being "incorrect"? --hoping to have made that distinction clear)

If the answer is, again--broadly speaking--that being thought "incorrect" causes us to feel uncomfortable, then why is that the case?

Is this a trivial and inconsequential question?
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