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Harry Frankfurt on bullshit

Harry Frankfurt talking about bullshit (and On Bullshit, for that matter):

It [bullshit] consists in a lack of concern for the difference between truth and falsity. The motivation of the bullshitter is not to say things that are true or even to say things that are false, but serving some other purpose, and the question of whether what he says is true or false is really irrelevant to his pursuit of that ambition.

The link to the full video is at the bottom of the page.

Link

Human universals

A list of human universals. For better or worse, all societies of whatever size share these.

[via The Blank Slate by Steven Pinker]

Tunguska simulation

National Geographic has a supercomputer simulation of the Tunguska event of 1908, where an air-bursting meteoroid or comet flattened a 30-mile area of Siberian forest. Boom!

Link

Lego Stephen Hawking

Lego Stephen Hawking

All the children will be wanting this next Christmas.

Link [via kottke.org]

How do you write orthography in text speak?

Text Messaging by Chandra Marsono

David Crystal on the orthography of text messaging and how, contrary to popular griping, it doesn’t signify the death of written English:

Although many texters enjoy breaking linguistic rules, they also know they need to be understood. There is no point in paying to send a message if it breaks so many rules that it ceases to be intelligible. When messages are longer, containing more information, the amount of standard orthography increases. Many texters alter just the grammatical words (such as “you” and “be”). As older and more conservative language users have begun to text, an even more standardised style has appeared. Some texters refuse to depart at all from traditional orthography. And conventional spelling and punctuation is the norm when institutions send out information messages, as in this university text to students: “Weather Alert! No classes today due to snow storm”, or in the texts which radio listeners are invited to send in to programmes. These institutional messages now form the majority of texts in cyberspace – and several organisations forbid the use of abbreviations, knowing that many readers will not understand them. Bad textiquette.

There’s more from Will Self and Lynne Truss.

That said, I’m one of the people who refuse to use abbreviations in any way whatsoever in a text message. I just like to think that it makes me better than everybody else.

Link

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