Teachers can help students identify and refute “Crazy Talk” by shifting their role from passive participants to “participant-observers” through the discipline of meta-semantics[1]. While “Stupid Talk” is a correctable mistake in performance, Crazy Talk is an attack on reason that serves irrational, evil, or overwhelmingly trivial purposes while creating an irrational context for human interaction[2][3].

To empower students against this form of discourse, teachers should focus on the following strategies:

1. Identifying the Symptoms of Crazy Talk

Students must first learn to recognize the linguistic patterns that signal an environment has become “toxic” or “crazy”[4]. Teachers can instruct students to look for:

Self-Confirming Language: Crazy talk is often self-confirming and refuses to acknowledge contradiction or ambiguity[5][6].

Massive Metaphors: It often relies on a single, one-dimensional paradigm that distorts complex reality, such as viewing all human relationships as a “class war”[7].

Scientism: This is the “grand illusion” that standardized procedures and numbers provide an unimpeachable source of moral authority[8]. Students should be wary of any discourse that reduces human beings to “calculable persons” or mere “data”[9][10].

Propaganda and “Herd Poisoning”: Teachers can help students identify language that invites an immediate, emotional, and either-or response, which often leads to “herd poisoning”—a state where individuals escape responsibility into “animal mindlessness”[11][12].

2. Adopting a Meta-Semantic Stance

Teachers can help students psychologically position themselves outside the context of a communication environment to observe its rules[1]. By becoming participant-observers, students focus on the “whys and hows” of communication rather than just the content[13]. This involves a “willing suspension of belief” and a heightening of interest in the process of communication itself[13].

3. The Inquiry Process: Asking Critical Questions

Postman argues that asking critical questions is the most effective way to open minds[14]. Teachers should move away from transmitting information and instead help students explore questions such as:

What is the purpose of this environment? Does the language serve a legitimate and humane goal, or is it creating an irrational purpose?[15][16]

Whose interest is being served? Who is in charge of maintaining the definitions being used, and what alternative definitions are being denied?[17][18]

What are the silent assumptions? What unstated beliefs are buried within the questions or assertions being made?[13][19]

To what extent is the language avoiding complexity? Does it use either-or categories or singular causes to mask a multifaceted reality?[20][21]

4. Implementing a “Crap-Detecting” Curriculum

To provide students with a long-term defense, teachers can adopt a curriculum based on the “ascent of humanity,” which emphasizes history and the disciplined use of language[22][23].

Semantics: Every teacher should be a semantics teacher, instructing students in the relationship between language and reality[24][25]. This helps students detect when language is being used to distort reality[26].

The Will to Refute: Following Karl Popper’s “fallibilism,” students should be taught to seek reasons why they should not believe something[27]. A scientific belief is one that can be tested and shown to be false; crazy talk, by contrast, is often irrefutable[28].

Operationalizing Language: Teachers can help students “operationalize” their talk by restating vague, “crazy” abstractions (like “Why am I a failure?”) into concrete, reality-oriented inquiries[29].

5. Cultivating a Sense of Humor

Ultimately, Postman identifies a sense of humor as the best defense against crazy talk[30]. A sense of humor allows for an “active appreciation of human frailty” and prevents discourse from being brought down by its own “unrelieved gravity”[30][31]. By encouraging irony and the recognition of “essential foolishness,” teachers can help students stay grounded in reason[30].