An Ounce - For Your Consideration

When Language Goes Wrong

Jim Fugate Season 8 Episode 27

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0:00 | 8:23

What happens when ordinary words get stretched until they stop helping us understand anything?
In this episode of An Ounce, a blueberry muffin becomes problematic, violent, gaslighting, iconic, and maybe even an existential emergency. Which is funny… until you realize how often real conversations work the same way.
This is not about banning strong words. Some things really are crises. Some things really are dangerous, harmful, traumatic, or catastrophic.
The question is what happens when charged words stop carrying meaning and start carrying emotion.
So before reacting to the loudest word in the sentence, maybe ask: what job is that word doing?


Stories That Outsmart the Obvious.


If you enjoyed this episode, you may also like Reclaiming Your Mind in the Age of Outrage, which looks more deeply at inflated definitions, emotional framing, and sophistry:
https://youtu.be/Ma7PDZ5PFhM

Chapters
00:00 — The sentence that may be the problem
00:52— A muffin walks into a bakery
03:02 — When charged words become verdicts
03:27 — The Word Inflation Bureau
04:02 — Attention rewards inflation
04:59 — Screwdrivers and stretched words
06:27 — Better questions
07:09 — The balloon labeled meaning
07:45— So here’s An Ounce
NOTE: Language changes over time—that’s normal. This episode is about what happens when emotionally charged words are stretched so broadly that they become less precise and less useful in everyday conversation.

References
Language, Meaning, and Clarity
George Orwell. Politics and the English Language (1946).
https://www.orwellfoundation.com/the-orwell-foundation/orwell/essays-and-other-works/politics-and-the-english-language/
Language Change & Semantics
Semantic Change (overview)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semantic_change
Language Change (overview)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Language_change
Etymological Fallacy (why current meaning is not always original meaning)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etymological_fallacy