claim
active
claim:subordinate-texts-like-to-undermine-their-superiors-by-suggesting-alternativesSubordinate texts like to undermine their superiors by suggesting alternatives.
Characterizes the subversive potential of footnotes, marginalia, and embedded commentary.
Neighborhood — ranked by edge-count
Questions (1)
question
- Dramatizes the struggle between main text and paratext.
Related by similarity (8)
cosine ≥ 0.65 · no typed edgeEntities in the same semantic neighborhood but without a typed relation to this one — candidates for new edges or unrecognized duplicates.
- If a text attempts to stand alone, it will almost certainly attract commentary or interference.hypothesis0.773Predicts the inevitability of dialogic intrusion upon any statement.
- Claim about the difficulty of responsiveness verification.
- Spatial verticality inherently projects hierarchical meaning.
- Personifies texts and asks about their desirous relational drives.
- Opening sentence defining self-evidencing.
- All models exhibit above-baseline representation of the think word when instructed to think about itfinding0.750In the intentional control experiment, all tested models show above-zero cosine similarity to the think word's concept vector.
- If we allow ourselves the luxury of paying attention to our own ideas, we shall certainly fail.claim0.749The danger of the maker's ego interfering with the unfolding process.