Chapter 7141
Not Following
Chapter 7141 (Seven Thousand One Hundred and Forty-One) Unconventional
“But the fact that it wasn’t said directly doesn’t prevent me from knowing,” the Brown-Handed Man said. “We all know.”
The gray-handed man laughed and said, "Do you mean you want me to tell you now?"
“Of course you can,” the brown-handed man said. “I’m just saying I hope you’ll tell me this time, but of course, if you don’t intend to tell me at all, that’s fine too.”
"Is that alright?" the gray-handed man asked.
The brown-handed man said, "Yes."
“Even though you say that, you still seem helpless,” said the gray-handed man.
"Where does he seem helpless?" the brown-handed man asked.
“Your tone,” said the gray-handed man.
“You didn’t say what tone of voice I was using,” the brown-handed man said.
“I didn’t say it, but you know it, don’t you?” the gray-handed man asked.
“No,” the brown-handed man laughed.
Gray-Handed Man said, "Are you saying that on purpose?"
“No,” said the brown-handed man. “I’ve been waiting for you to say it.”
Grayhand asked, "Is this the case this time?"
“Yes,” the brown-handed man said. “I’m waiting for you to say which sentence you’re referring to so I can continue the conversation.”
The gray-handed man said, "That's fine too."
“What’s wrong with ‘okay’?” the brown-handed man asked.
"You sound helpless about what you said," said the gray-handed man. "And you're asking me what's wrong?"
The brown-handed man said, "Let me explain. I asked you 'okay' on purpose, but that was intentional."
The gray-handed man laughed and said, "I know you did it on purpose."
“But you didn’t say it, you know,” the brown-handed man said.
“Do I have to say it every time I find out?” the gray-handed man said. “That doesn’t seem logical.” “What doesn’t seem logical?” the brown-handed man said. “Tell me, what exactly do you mean?”
"Are you asking me what 'common sense' specifically refers to?" Grayhand asked.
“Yes,” said the brown-handed man.
“This time you don’t seem to be doing this on purpose by having me tell you,” said the Greyhand.
“It wasn’t intentional. I just didn’t understand what you meant by ‘common sense’,” the brown-handed man said.
“It means ‘not every time you know something, you need to say it,’” Grayhand said. “Generally, you only say it when you don’t know, and you say it to ask. If you already know it, you don’t need to say it, right?”
The brown-handed man said, "You consider this common sense?"
The gray-handed man said, "Yes, isn't that common sense?"
"If you already know, there's no need to say it?" the brown-handed man said.
The gray-handed man asked, "Is there something wrong with what you said?"
The brown-handed man laughed and said, "It seems like there's a big problem for us."
“The common sense I’m talking about is universal,” said the gray-handed man.
"But there's a range to it. Within what range is it universally applicable?" the brown-handed man asked.
Gray-Handed Man said, "It's just within the general range. Common sense applies to the general range, right?"
“But it doesn’t apply within the scope of ‘you and me’,” the brown-handed man laughed. “If we consider ‘you and me’ as the general scope, then it’s a different story.”
"Why should we consider 'you and me' as a general category?" the gray-handed man asked.
"Do you think it's inappropriate?" the brown-handed man asked.
"The general scope can't just include 'you and me,' right?" Grayhand asked.
“That depends on what kind of ‘general’ you mean,” the brown-handed man said. “Does it include the ‘general’ range of people, or something else?”
"What else?" Grayhand asked. "What aspect are you thinking of?"