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Jun 3, 2010
This week's themeWords not named after the person they should be This week's words McKenzie orrery philippic Buridan's ass guillotine
A cartoon on the debate in the US Congress over whether to build a canal through
Panama or Nicaragua
Cartoonist: William Allen Rogers (1854-1931)
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with Anu GargBuridan's ass
PRONUNCIATION:
(byoo-RUHD-uhnz ass)
MEANING:
noun:
A situation demonstrating the impracticality of decision-making using
pure reason, especially a situation involving two equal choices.
ETYMOLOGY:
Named after French philosopher Jean Buridan (1300-1358).
NOTES:
Imagine a hungry donkey standing equidistant from two identical piles
of hay. The donkey tries to decide which pile he should eat first and finding
no reason to choose one over another, starves to death. This paradox didn't
originate with Buridan -- it's been found back in Aristotle's time. A hungry
and thirsty man cannot decide whether to slake his thirst first or his hunger,
and dies. Buridan, in his commentaries on Aristotle, chose a dog, but his
critics, in their parody of Buridan, turned it into an ass. So Buridan's ass
was named after a person who neither proposed the paradox nor picked that
animal to discuss it.Buridan studied under William of Ockham (of Ockham's razor fame). USAGE:
"Unless we felt strongly enough to exert ourselves in one direction
rather than another, we would do nothing, but would suffer the fate
of Buridan's ass."A.C. Grayling; Though Euphoria Will Fade, Hope Springs Eternal; The Canberra Times (Australia); Nov 12, 2008. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
I am I plus my surroundings and if I do not preserve the latter, I do not preserve myself. -Jose Ortega Y Gasset, philosopher and essayist (1883-1955)
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