Chaos
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2003
- Messages
- 10,611
I´m trying to put something into words that I´ve been thinking about for some time, so please bear with me if it isn´t as clear as it might be.
I think there are at least three degrees of "wrongness" - BTW, there should be a nice pretentiously Latin-sounding technical term for "wrongness", but I can´t think of one right now, so all suggestions are welcome.
Anyway, for example you could think that 3*3 = 10. That, of course, is wrong, it´s 1 too much - well, excrement happens, anybody can make a mistake like that in the heat of the action. My professors in university do that all the time when presenting examples for certain formulas, and nobody thinks any less of them for it. (They´re economists - numbers below 1 billion are just too trivial for them
)
Then, you could think that 3*3 = 333. That, of course, is also wrong - but this is an educational kind of wrong; in this case, it teaches you that "three times 3" does not mean writing three 3´s in a row. I suppose Lamarck´s ideas on the hereditary transmission of acquired traits are that kind of wrong, because debunking it teaches a lesson on the nature of heredity.
Lastly, there´s 3*3 = Giraffe. That is so wrong that it goes off the end of the scale and wraps around into metaphysical absurdity. It doesn´t teach or demonstrate anything substantial, but is pure *facepalm* material. I´ll leave it to your imagination what kind of crackpot stuff fits into this category.
Okay, that´s it. You may now call me a genius... or whatever.
I think there are at least three degrees of "wrongness" - BTW, there should be a nice pretentiously Latin-sounding technical term for "wrongness", but I can´t think of one right now, so all suggestions are welcome.
Anyway, for example you could think that 3*3 = 10. That, of course, is wrong, it´s 1 too much - well, excrement happens, anybody can make a mistake like that in the heat of the action. My professors in university do that all the time when presenting examples for certain formulas, and nobody thinks any less of them for it. (They´re economists - numbers below 1 billion are just too trivial for them
Then, you could think that 3*3 = 333. That, of course, is also wrong - but this is an educational kind of wrong; in this case, it teaches you that "three times 3" does not mean writing three 3´s in a row. I suppose Lamarck´s ideas on the hereditary transmission of acquired traits are that kind of wrong, because debunking it teaches a lesson on the nature of heredity.
Lastly, there´s 3*3 = Giraffe. That is so wrong that it goes off the end of the scale and wraps around into metaphysical absurdity. It doesn´t teach or demonstrate anything substantial, but is pure *facepalm* material. I´ll leave it to your imagination what kind of crackpot stuff fits into this category.
Okay, that´s it. You may now call me a genius... or whatever.

