moritheil
First Post
Crothian said:Being dyslexic is not shameful or anything.
Calling someone dyslexic who very well may not be is insultive. Basically, it seems that what they said is so messed up to you, that the only way it could have happened is if they are dyslexic, non english speaker, or messed up. Its like that what they said could not have been done on purpose so there has to be some underlying reason for the mistake. It is very dismissive and again insulting.
But I don't understand why someone would claim to have proof, and offer it, when they obviously don't. "He said so" has never been, in my understanding, sufficient proof for anyone of anything - it's not a mathematical proof, it's not a legal proof, and it's not a philosophical proof. Even kids have trouble believing things just because so-and-so said so. So I really don't get why someone would say something like that and call it a proof. It is very strange to me, on a level with standing in front of me and telling me the sky is green, when I can look up and see that it's blue, or handing me a ten dollar bill and telling me it's a hundred dollar bill, when I can clearly see that it's a ten.
How should I politely convey this fact?
It was my understanding that offering a possibility wherein a mistake was not someone else's fault is a polite thing to do. For example, I once posted correcting someone who misread the SRD, and asked if he missed it because it was late in his time zone. He responded with a smile and noted that it was indeed late where he was. It was my understanding that this was more polite than simply telling him he was wrong. My understanding of mental disability such as dyslexia is that it is similarly not the poster's fault for putting a wrong word in. But I'm seeing that apparently to most EN Worlders there is a real stigma associated with it, so I shouldn't bring it up.