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Emotional Granularity and the Language of Inner Life: What Standardized Testing Can Never Capture
"The Crying Spider" - Odilon Redon, 1881 Most language education frameworks treat emotion as a subset of vocabulary - learn "frustrated," "elated," "apprehensive," move on. The CEFR's C2 descriptor, for all its sophistication, operates with a similar assumption: that emotional nuance in language is a matter of range, of having enough words available to choose the right one in context. But this is a category error, and it has quietly shaped several decades of advanced English
Teaching Creativity in the Age of Hyperreality: What Jean Baudrillard Can Tell Us About Language Learning
When Jean Baudrillard wrote about the precession of simulacra in 1981, he described a world where representations precede and determine reality itself. We no longer experience the real, he argued, but navigate through endless layers of signs, copies without originals, simulations that have become more real than reality. At the time, this seemed like philosophical abstraction. Today, scrolling through Instagram, interacting with ChatGPT, or watching deepfake videos, his observ


The Cohesion Trap: Why AI-Generated Text Reads Like a Textbook and What It Means for Language Learners
Der Bücherwurm" (The Bookworm) / Carl Spitzweg / 1850 There's a peculiar quality to AI-generated writing that most readers sense but few can articulate. The prose flows smoothly, transitions appear logical, yet something feels mechanical – as if the text were designed for someone who needs every conceptual leap explained. This isn't coincidence. Large language models have been trained predominantly on explicit academic writing, student essays optimized for standardized tests,


Semantic Satiation: The Gateway to Creative Language Recovery
Luttrell Psalter (marginalia detail) / Unknown artist / c. 1325-1340 Medieval manuscript marginalia often featured obsessively repeated motifs – vines, scrollwork, hybrid creatures – that scribes drew while their minds wandered during repetitive textual labor. These doodles represent the creative output of semantic-saturated minds seeking novelty amid monotonous copying. The playful absurdity of marginal figures (like
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