• @Aceticon
    link
    English
    32 months ago

    It sounds like the university called it “anonymous donor” for PR reasons whilst it is in fact “undisclosed donor”.

    Your point only makes sense if indeed the donor was genuinelly anonymous (I.e. even the University had no idea who they were) rather than merely described as anonymous by the University for the purpose of divulging it to the outside world.

    • @SpaceNoodle
      link
      English
      02 months ago

      So my only mistake was not assuming that the university was lying.

      • @Aceticon
        link
        English
        3
        edit-2
        2 months ago

        You didn’t made a mistake, IMHO.

        Nobody made a mistake.

        There was just a mistmatch between your unvoiced assumptions and those of other people posting here, so all of you were really just starting from different points and hence going in different directions.

        I suppose many downvoters might have assumed you were purposefully taking a specifically literal interpretation of “anonymous” in this context for the purpose of defending the University whilst I myself just went with it being a perfectly valid explanation until proven otherwise that you’re just a more literal person than most.

        This is why I went for writting a post which I believed would provide some clarity rather than downvoting your posts.

        As I see it your points were valid for an interpretation that the University and the article used “anonymous” in the most honest of ways (meaning, “unknown to others”) and other posters pointers were valid for an interpretation that the University and the article used “anonymous” in a deceitful way that didn’t match the dictionary definition but instead meant “unknown to the general public”, something for which the correct word is “undisclosed”.