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Jaleh Posted 10 years ago
Vocabulary

"The common belief that “owners come to look like their pets” may not be a literal truism but rather a figure of speech indicating that our pets are our self-objects."
Can anyone explain this sentence in a simple way to me?
  

Top answer

The idea that people get to (physically) look like their pets is not literally true. It is a figurative expression to indicate that people see their pets as a reflection of themselves.

  • The idea that people get to (physically) look like their pets is not literally true.
  • It is a figurative expression to indicate that people see their pets as a reflection of themselves.
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3 Answers
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The idea that people get to (physically) look like their pets is not literally true. It is a figurative expression to indicate that people see their pets as a reflection of themselves.
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There is a common belief that “owners come to look like their pets”.
This belief may not be literally true.
Instead, it may be a figure of speech etc.

You can look up "self-object" as well as I can, but by one definition it means "the experience of another – more precisely, the experience of impersonal functions provided by another – as part of the self".

I don't really k
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Many thanks dear teechr. Just tell me what does self-object mean?

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