That which has no name does not exist Our brain is built so that without a name, the abil…

That which has no name does not exist Our brain is built so that without a name, the ability to associate and interpret a concept is lost.…

That which has no name does not exist Our brain is built so that without a name, the ability to associate and interpret a concept is lost. Studies show: the presence of a precise term activates the corresponding neural networks, helping information sink in more deeply. "Implicit" evokes clear, universal associations, while the subjective "fucking convoluted" does not. The first works within an established definition, the second depends on personal experience and context. Precise words are the basis of mutual understanding. Replacing a complex term with a simple one leads to distortion of meaning. Especially in industries like IT, where everything is intertwined and people with different expertise work together: designers, programmers, marketers, lawyers - each with their own "bird language." The more precise our communication is, the more chances there are for understanding and a predictable result. Profanity, however expressive it may be, is subjective and unstructured. In Russian culture it is often associated with protest, freedom of expression, or belonging to a certain social group. But in a professional environment, profanity rarely works as a communication tool. Instead of connection it creates a rupture - especially where precision is needed, not emotion. If you cannot explain to a designer what is wrong with their solution, and your dialogue is built from subjective obscene constructions - sorry, dear friend, but your expertise turns out to be dogshit. If you do not understand each other, how will users understand your ideas, when they do not care about you at all? Go develop yourself or make way --Post-credits scene-- - But Tema swears all the time... (a sharp slap is heard) - Artemy wrote Kovodstvo without resorting to obscene language
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