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2007-11-04 19:14:18 · 2 answers · asked by rusalka 3 in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

Sometimes it seems there is a deliberate and intentional attempt to make things appear more difficult and complex than they are?

e.g "cognitive dissonance" "pious transformation of old cognitive construct" bla bla why not just say conflicted thoughts?? the expression of concepts or ideas would be far easier to staff/students without the language littering.

2007-11-04 19:41:28 · update #1

2 answers

Every field has jargon. It helps those within the field to better express those concepts which get used all the time as they talk to one another.

2007-11-04 19:19:49 · answer #1 · answered by neniaf 7 · 0 0

Terminology can help communicate suggestions e.g. we've a term for 'table' so we don't could say 'i like to place my ft on the wood shape with 4 legs that we consume dinner off'. the purpose of jargon is to exclude non-contributors from expertise suggestions. people are appropriate to be mistrustful of jargon and could insist on a coherent rationalization. understand that the reason could be very very confusing to understand, even interior the main common words (e.g. a proof of e=mc2). despite the fact that different the jargon interior the media at the instant comes from sociologists/social psychologists, and as those disciplines are much less complicated than subatomic physics a particularly common rationalization for many jargon could be attainable. If none is drawing close, be very suspicious of what you're being advised.

2016-10-15 02:19:46 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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