Thursday, March 18, 2010

What Lewis Carroll Taught Us


From : Slate



Alice's creator knew all about role-playing.


Toward the end of his life, in 1896, Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (also known as Lewis Carroll) published a survey of his professional work as an Oxford mathematician. Symbolic Logic set out to clarify the confusion he saw at work among the academic logicians of his day. Logic emerges, in this volume, as something of a game: rule-governed, yet arbitrary. It is not the dry purview of the pedant, but the imaginative landscape of a creative mind. Indeed, the book concludes, logicians often think of things like the cupola of a proposition "almost as if it were a living, conscious entity, capable of declaring for itself what it chose to mean." But Dodgson warns that we should not simply "submit" to the "sovereign will and pleasure" of these terms. Instead, "any writer of a book is fully authorized in attaching any meaning he likes to any word of phrase he intends to use."





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NO APOLOGY, by Mitt Romney. (St. Martin’s, $25.99.) The former Massachusetts governor and Republican presidential candidate calls for economic and civic­ ­revitalization. (†) (†)
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1 comments:

Media Mentions said...

http://www.pressdisplay.com/pressdisplay/showlink.aspx?bookmarkid=SR4KWYY55Z83&preview=article&linkid=e82ac7fb-b71b-491d-8fcf-c7a31d0d21d3&pdaffid=ZVFwBG5jk4Kvl9OaBJc5%2bg%3d%3d

...and yet he's as much a mystery as Shakespeare. Well, in a sense.

Sincerely,
MediaMentions