Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close
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YES and NO on hands
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i noticed it...but didn't think about it til you did...maybe a tatoo would have been too permanent...what if he couldn't express that anymore either?
Alison wrote: "Why can't he just shake or nod his head?"I think because he was a sculptor, hands were much more important than just a simple head yes/no nod/shake. Hands were virtually the continuation and the language of his creative soul.
Besides, not all body signs are universally interpreted in different cultures. But it is only my humble opinion.
If you're going to worry so much about nodding or shaking your head not being perceived in other cultures then you've also got to worry about writing an English word on each hand. You'd have the same cultural/language drawbacks.
Stuart wrote: "If you're going to worry so much about nodding or shaking your head not being perceived in other cultures then you've also got to worry about writing an English word on each hand. You'd have the sa..."Stuart, what is your explanation of this self-imposed loss of linguistic abilities and a very limited vocabulary? I believe that he saw the world in its most fundamental embodiment and used the most polysemantic words to convey a myriad of meanings.
I believe he just realised that he could answer the majority of questions either with a positive or negative (the basis of why the yes/no game is difficult to play).I tend not to read much into the meanings behind things in the books I read though, so I doubt you'll find a challenging or interesting opinion in this comment. :)
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Just something interesting to me, wondered if anyone else noticed it and what you think it means.