: David Hume argued that there is no "I" as a stable entity. Instead, the self is just a "bundle" of ever-changing perceptions, memories, and sensations.
The traveler smiled sadly. “You are the one who chose to stay. I am the one who chose to leave. But ‘I’ is neither the shop nor the road. ‘I’ is the one currently making the next choice.”
She gave tickets to Sarah and (I / me). → Remove "Sarah and" → She gave tickets to me (correct) / to I (wrong). ✅ She gave tickets to Sarah and me.
In a world of complex ligatures and silent consonants, "i" stands apart. It is a straight line with a promise of a curve overhead. But how did this minimalist stroke become one of the most powerful symbols in human communication?
: David Hume argued that there is no "I" as a stable entity. Instead, the self is just a "bundle" of ever-changing perceptions, memories, and sensations.
The traveler smiled sadly. “You are the one who chose to stay. I am the one who chose to leave. But ‘I’ is neither the shop nor the road. ‘I’ is the one currently making the next choice.”
She gave tickets to Sarah and (I / me). → Remove "Sarah and" → She gave tickets to me (correct) / to I (wrong). ✅ She gave tickets to Sarah and me.
In a world of complex ligatures and silent consonants, "i" stands apart. It is a straight line with a promise of a curve overhead. But how did this minimalist stroke become one of the most powerful symbols in human communication?