skykiii
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Jun 17, 2018
This is kind of a shower thought I had.
One thing I realized a long time ago is that a lot of "complicated thoughts" really aren't complicated, they're just badly explained.
And when a thing is badly explained, there tends to be one of three causes:
1. The explainer themselves does not have a sufficient grasp of the thing they are trying to explain.
2. The explainer just plain is not a good communicator in general and regularly fails to make things clear no matter what.
3. The explainer actually wants the explanation to be complicated for whatever reason. This usually takes the form of either the explainer has some (possibly subconscious) need to show off how smart they are, or else they're the kind of autist who thinks some tiny details are all-important when really those could be glossed over and clarified later when/if they turn out to be relevant.
This in mind... in theory, there is no idea or concept in existence so complicated that you could not potentially explain it to, say, a five-year-old kid of average intelligence.
This isn't to say that I can explain everything--just that in theory its possible. You just have to find someone who A) knows what they're talking about and B) isn't a socially inept autist.
One thing I realized a long time ago is that a lot of "complicated thoughts" really aren't complicated, they're just badly explained.
And when a thing is badly explained, there tends to be one of three causes:
1. The explainer themselves does not have a sufficient grasp of the thing they are trying to explain.
2. The explainer just plain is not a good communicator in general and regularly fails to make things clear no matter what.
3. The explainer actually wants the explanation to be complicated for whatever reason. This usually takes the form of either the explainer has some (possibly subconscious) need to show off how smart they are, or else they're the kind of autist who thinks some tiny details are all-important when really those could be glossed over and clarified later when/if they turn out to be relevant.
This in mind... in theory, there is no idea or concept in existence so complicated that you could not potentially explain it to, say, a five-year-old kid of average intelligence.
This isn't to say that I can explain everything--just that in theory its possible. You just have to find someone who A) knows what they're talking about and B) isn't a socially inept autist.