The issue is that to use "I" you have to have an identity.
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Replying to @drjtwit
I see that. I had never previously conceived that it might affect people's reading of it. Trying to understand why that happens...
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Replying to @blahah404
You can synthesize an identity, you can be "The Coko Collective" and use I.
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Replying to @drjtwit
Yes I understand the suggested solutions, but not how/why it affects people when they are not used.
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Replying to @blahah404 @drjtwit
Because you need an identity. It's actually really simple. There's no author identity, no introduction.
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Sorry for being stupid. I am listening that this matters, and am trying to understand why - when I read I don't notice author identity.
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And clearly nobody in the entire production process did either. I want to be able to advocate for this issue effectively, which is why I'm..
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...persisting despite my robust ignorance. I will try to advocate without grokking - dont want to demand more emotional labour from you all.
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Replying to @blahah404 @drjtwit
Any document you read online either has the authors names or they introduce themselves.
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It's *why* the absence of this disturbs people that I am trying to understand. Do anonymous texts in first-person cause the same problem?
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This is like asking me to come up with a psychological theory for you. Good luck discussing this with them.
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Indeed, I don't expect anyone to answer this question for me. I am researching it elsewhere. Thanks everyone for engaging.
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