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This discussion explores the concept of predatory fluency, a destructive communication style where a highly articulate individual uses weaponized ambiguity to manipulate others. Unlike a traditional monster defined by brute force, this "unbalanced sage" operates entirely in a symbolic or abstract layer while intentionally detaching from literal responsibility and shared concrete facts. By using the literal meaning of words as an "escape hatch" to deny the harmful intent of their tone or subtext, the predator creates an interpretive asymmetry that forces the listener to doubt their own reality. Ultimately, the text distinguishes this management of people from true wisdom, or the "balanced sage," who uses metaphors as scaffolding for growth rather than a cage for control.
By Joseph Michael GarrityThis discussion explores the concept of predatory fluency, a destructive communication style where a highly articulate individual uses weaponized ambiguity to manipulate others. Unlike a traditional monster defined by brute force, this "unbalanced sage" operates entirely in a symbolic or abstract layer while intentionally detaching from literal responsibility and shared concrete facts. By using the literal meaning of words as an "escape hatch" to deny the harmful intent of their tone or subtext, the predator creates an interpretive asymmetry that forces the listener to doubt their own reality. Ultimately, the text distinguishes this management of people from true wisdom, or the "balanced sage," who uses metaphors as scaffolding for growth rather than a cage for control.