• Flying SquidM
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    236 months ago

    Then it’s odd that so many people, myself included, interpreted it that way.

    • @ABCDE
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      -196 months ago

      It doesn’t mean it’s true.

      • Flying SquidM
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        126 months ago

        I’m pretty sure what something implies is dependent upon the reader’s interpretation. And it looks like many readers think it implies that a non-American is about to land on the moon even if you didn’t think so.

        • @ABCDE
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          -146 months ago

          The writers intention. You can read there being an implication, but it doesn’t mean it is implied.

          • Flying SquidM
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            96 months ago

            Please tell me how you are able to figure out what the writer’s intention is from a headline.

            Because I would think that would require reading the article and no one is complaining about the contents of the article.

            • @ABCDE
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              -96 months ago

              Tell me how you can, perhaps? I can figure it out because… I can? And the article backs that up.

              • Flying SquidM
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                116 months ago

                “I can tell the author’s intent because I can” is circular reasoning and is not rational or logical. What that tells me is that you know that the author’s intent cannot easily be discerned from a headline other than taking it at face value, but you’ve been backed into a corner and refuse to admit it.

                • @ABCDE
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                  -46 months ago

                  you’ve been backed into a corner and refuse to admit it.

                  Another example which is wrong.

                  • Flying SquidM
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                    66 months ago

                    That’s not an example.

                    But if you are actually claiming that you can tell an author’s intent from the title, I assume you would know that O. Henry intended “The Gift of the Magi” to be ironic, right? Because that must have really ruined the ending for you.

                    Similarly, the end of “The Wizard of Oz” where it turns out that title is actually meant to be a ruse because the wizard is not actually a wizard must have been a huge disappointment to you.

                    The rest of us, however, do not have this special ability you have and have to take titles at face value until we read the context.

                • @ABCDE
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                  -46 months ago

                  No. The article also says you are not correct. You didn’t tell me how you can understand it other than what you think. The same logic.

                  • Flying SquidM
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                    56 months ago

                    We are not talking about the article, we are talking about the headline.