Just got out of lockup / jail tried to message you I can't get into any old accounts message me back on Twitter or here I missed you I don't really have an online presence or want one but I do want to message you or say hi
Hey I know your asleep and darn I just wanted to reach you I just got out of 2 months jail they tried to lock me in state hospital etc as a mad man haha I am posting from under the city and I have a Kane 2003 entourage of cops no lie I'll be gone by tomorrow I am disappeared a
Sometimes, I just think Strauss' approach might sometimes be right. When I read books from cultures that are less familiar to me than my own, I always have to account for the fact that the narrator can be somewhat unreliable*. Just as when I interview people, I don't expect that they will tell the truth all the time. Some do, some do less. And some are pathological liars. This is exactly what I find fascinating (and also what some of social intelligence is for).
After all, I do not descend from Immanuel Kant and expect be offered truth every time. Particularly in a case where someone with a knife chasing after someone fleeing from him. When the "prey" found a lucky turn and disappeared, should one expect the bystander to tell the predator the full truth about where his potential victim disappear?
*of course narrator unreliability can also happen when a book describes a familiar culture. The point is more not to accept that narrator is reliable just because he is coming from an unfamiliar culture.
Just got out of lockup / jail tried to message you I can't get into any old accounts message me back on Twitter or here I missed you I don't really have an online presence or want one but I do want to message you or say hi
Hey I lost everything again and it will be a minute before I have solid accounts I can't log In I just wanted to reach you
Hey I know your asleep and darn I just wanted to reach you I just got out of 2 months jail they tried to lock me in state hospital etc as a mad man haha I am posting from under the city and I have a Kane 2003 entourage of cops no lie I'll be gone by tomorrow I am disappeared a
Sometimes, I just think Strauss' approach might sometimes be right. When I read books from cultures that are less familiar to me than my own, I always have to account for the fact that the narrator can be somewhat unreliable*. Just as when I interview people, I don't expect that they will tell the truth all the time. Some do, some do less. And some are pathological liars. This is exactly what I find fascinating (and also what some of social intelligence is for).
After all, I do not descend from Immanuel Kant and expect be offered truth every time. Particularly in a case where someone with a knife chasing after someone fleeing from him. When the "prey" found a lucky turn and disappeared, should one expect the bystander to tell the predator the full truth about where his potential victim disappear?
*of course narrator unreliability can also happen when a book describes a familiar culture. The point is more not to accept that narrator is reliable just because he is coming from an unfamiliar culture.