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- Newsgroups: rec.arts.books
- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!CSD-NewsHost.Stanford.EDU!CSD-NewsHost!jmc
- From: jmc@SAIL.Stanford.EDU (John McCarthy)
- Subject: Re: Morally good hypertext
- In-Reply-To: ah@dunaad.co.uk's message of 23 Dec 92 11:55:27 GMT
- Message-ID: <JMC.92Dec23092435@SAIL.Stanford.EDU>
- Sender: news@CSD-NewsHost.Stanford.EDU
- Reply-To: jmc@cs.Stanford.EDU
- Organization: Computer Science Department, Stanford University
- References: <BzoFKz.B26@dcs.glasgow.ac.uk> <BzoM10.MAt@watserv2.uwaterloo.ca>
- <JMC.92Dec23001836@SAIL.Stanford.EDU> <BzpnsG.Fy@dunaad.co.uk>
- Date: 23 Dec 92 09:24:35
- Lines: 20
-
- I included:
- >What can one recommend in the meantime?
- >...
- >3. Prefer immediate benefits to hypothetical long range benefits.
- >The theory promising the long range benefits may not be that good.
-
- Alan Hunter replied:
-
- It is that reasoning which causes all political leaders to
- push each economic upturn as far as it will go, inevitably
- giving rise to the next downturn.
-
- Precisely. The theory that the upturn leads to the downturn or,
- more specifically, what aspect of the upturn leads to a downturn,
- is dubious. Not clearly wrong - but dubious.
- --
- John McCarthy, Computer Science Department, Stanford, CA 94305
- *
- He who refuses to do arithmetic is doomed to talk nonsense.
-
-