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Talking past each other

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Talking past each other" is an English phrase describing the situation where two or more people talk about different subjects, while believing that they are talking about the same thing.[1]

David Horton writes that when characters in fiction talk past each other, the effect is to expose "an unbridgeable gulf between their respective perceptions and intentions. The result is an exchange, but never an interchange, of words in fragmented and cramped utterances whose subtext often reveals more than their surface meaning."[2]

The phrase is used in widely varying contexts. For example, in 1917, Albert Einstein and David Hilbert had dawn-to-dusk discussions of physics; and they continued their debate in writing, although Felix Klein records that they "talked past each other, as happens not infrequently between simultaneously producing mathematicians."[3]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ The equivalent idiom in Chinese is "chicken talking to a duck" (鸡同鸭讲 or 雞同鴨講).
  2. ^ David Horton (1992). "Introduction". Pioneers in Ingolstadt. Manchester University Press. p. 25. ISBN 0719034671.
  3. ^ Mehra, Jagdish. (1974). Einstein, Hilbert, and the Theory of Gravitation. p. 84.

References

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