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Because...the monkey told the goat that the owl told the sloth to get a life because his boss told the cat to tell me to go on allphilosophy and go to this question and to tell all of you that the monkey told the goat that the owl told the sloth to get a life because his boss told the cat to tell me to go on allphilosophy and go to this question and to tell all of you that the monkey told the goat that the owl told the sloth to get a life because his boss told the cat to tell me to go on allphilosophy and go to this question and to tell all of you that the monkey told the goat that the owl told the sloth to get a life because his boss told the cat to tell me to go on allphilosophy and go to this question and to tell all of you that the monkey told the goat that the owl told the sloth to get a life because his boss told the cat to tell me to go on allphilosophy and go to this question and to tell all of you that (continues)Voted for by Backward thgindiM.


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wurzalgnu
January 24
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NoeL-
January 24
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I think it's a pretty poor philosophical question, really. We ask why to gather more knowledge. We seek more knowledge because it's beneficial to our survival.
Weydon
January 25
NoeL-
January 26
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An easy way to tell is to substitute the word for a pronoun. If it's "he/she/they/it" then use "who", if it's "him/her/them/that" use "whom".
E.g. "Who was that guy?"
- The sentence "he was that guy" makes sense, but "him was that guy" doesn't, so you use "who". In this sentence "that guy" is the object, and "who" (his identity) is the subject.
E.g. "I have a dog, whom I call Scruffy"
- The object is "dog", the subject is "Scruffy" (its name). The latter part of the sentence can be arranged as "I call HIM Scruffy", and so you use "whom".
Weydon
January 26
Xelgaroth
January 27
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