Attempt 1: featureless. |
Attempt 2: ludicrous |
Not sure about the yellow ridge. |
Definitely inching my way towards a solution.
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Currently listening to:
Things Optimo:
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Last night's dinner:
Supermarket Moussaka |
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Currently reading:
Into the final year. |
Drumming practice update:
As per usual, an hour's practice - focusing on the left hand - accompanying various speeds of online 4/4 metronomes.
eg:
or:
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Miscellany:
One of the most irritating features in the last 18 months about reading contemporary works on the philosophy of mind and, now I find the same feature appearing in my studies of propositional logic, is the use by American authors of the phrase "just in case".
They do not use it in the way that we would normally use it and it's been bloody confusing. So today I googled the phrase and sure enough it's a problem to many people in many fields.
Came across this great article dealing successfully with the issue.
http://itre.cis.upenn.edu/~myl/languagelog/archives/003470.html
August
18, 2006
Just in case
An
American acquaintance who had used the phrase just in case twice in a
technical article about the philosophy of linguistics was asked twice by the
copy editor what he meant by it. A reasonable question if (as I suspect) the
copy editor was British. There is an unusually nasty dialect difference in
connection with this phrase.
In British English (and, let me say by way of update, also for most
ordinary Americans),
just in case always means "lest". Thus We'll take an
umbrella just in case it rains means nothing other than "We'll take an
umbrella in order to insure ourselves against the unfortunate possibility that
it might rain." In the Everly Brothers' song "Just In Case", on
their superb 1960 album It's Everly Time, the title clearly has this sense.
But
in American English as used by those trained in the formal sciences and
philosophy (and
perhaps also now by some British writers who have picked up the usage of
American scholars),
just in case has acquired a new idiomatic sense: "in, and only in,
the case where", or in other words, "if and only if". So a
sentence like An integer greater than 1 is a prime just in case it has no
divisors other than 1 and itself means "An integer greater than 1 is a
prime if and only if it has no divisors other than 1 and itself."
I
have always thought this is a disastrous piece of dialect divergence. Imagine
an American computation theorist talking to a British English speaker who has
lived a sheltered life:
A: A
set of of strings has a decidable membership problem just in case it and its
complement are both recursively enumerable.
B: What,
you mean the set acquires decidability to guard against the worrying
eventuality that it and its complement might turn out to be be r.e.? You must
be bonkers.
Or
imagine a British English speaker planning a picnic with an American logician whose horizons are entirely limited
to within logic and philosophy (someone totally unacquainted with the Everly
Brothers or other ordinary people):
B: We'll
take an umbrella just in case it rains.
A: What?
Material equivalence holds between us taking an umbrella and it raining?
What're you talking about? I don't see an implication in either direction,
given that the second proposition is a contingent claim about the future; let
alone a biconditional... You gotta be kidding.
I
do not normally have much regard for the old saying about the British and the
Americans being two nations divided by a common language; but it really does
come to mind in this restricted case.
[Please
note the green updates above. I am not saying that no American sources have the
"lest" sense. I am saying that American logicians, mathematicians,
philosophers, and such have departed from it. Try a Google search on this
pattern: That will bring up a slew of examples of the
"if and only if" meaning.]
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