To me, that's the same sort of logical cop-out as when someone says, "well we can never really KNOW anything 100%". Ultimately true, but logically unhelpful - it ends all discussion yet misses the point. We only have "normal" under the system of categorization that we've created, just as we only "know" things under a similar system. So the issue is, within that system, is our understanding of normality comparable to our understanding of individuality?
Is normality preferable to individuality?
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No one is the same as someone else, the irony is that we're all the same due to us all being different.
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11 years ago
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To me, that's the same sort of logical cop-out as when someone says, "well we can never really KNOW anything 100%". Ultimately true, but logically unhelpful - it ends all discussion yet misses the point. We only have "normal" under the system of categorization that we've created, just as we only "know" things under a similar system. So the issue is, within that system, is our understanding of normality comparable to our understanding of individuality?