Board Thread:Speculation House/@comment-28486044-20160727075112/@comment-25936766-20160729160309

Cyrania de Bergerac wrote: All stories meant to be stories do have a moral at them since an author or storyteller shares his view of the world with his stories and therefore subconsciously if not consciously any story contains some lesson about the real world, You would be an excellent english teacher.....but:



In the end, things only have a deeper meaning if you think they have one, even if they were never intended to have one at all.

Interesting how one can find aesops where there are none.

therefore why any story can be stuck with aesops even if its nonsensical like how the author's purpose with Alice in Wonderland is to show what the world could be like if immaginary numbers were allowed to exist. ......If someone even thinks Alice In Wonderland has anything even reasonably resembling an aesop, that person is definitely more high than Alice herself probably was through the whole story.

And if the assumed-aesop is nonsensical, or irrelevant to the whole tale, then that person is more between High and Dumb. Or maybe they're just a satirical troll.