
Cold, Aliens, and the Grammar That Thinks It Knows Too Much
The source, an excerpt from a philosophical blog post titled "Cold, Aliens, and the Grammar That Thinks It Knows Too Much," presents a socio-political and philosophical musing that critically examines the relationship between language, grammar, and metaphysical assumptions. The author, Bry Willis, shares a discussion that began elsewhere regarding whether one "is" cold, "has" cold, or merely "senses" it, using this linguistic variation (comparing être, avoir, and sentir) to argue that grammatical structures can deceptively imply underlying ontologies or essences, which the text refers to as a 'category error.' The central argument is that familiar grammatical scaffolding is often mistaken for shared metaphysics, and that slowing down the linguistic encounter, such as when considering how to translate concepts like 'cold' or communicate with aliens, exposes the philosophical work quietly performed by grammar itself. Ultimately, the post suggests that language does more than describe experience; it categorises it and dictates conceptual boundaries.👽 https://philosophics.blog/2025/12/18/cold-aliens-and-the-grammar-that-thinks-it-knows-too-much/
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