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- Date: Sat, 23 Jan 1993 22:06:03 -0800
- Sender: English Language Discussion Group <WORDS-L@uga.cc.uga.edu>
- From: Peter Montgomery <MONTGOMERY@CAMINS.CAMOSUN.BC.CA>
- Subject: Re: Shark
- Comments: To: WORDS-L@uga.cc.uga.edu
- Lines: 28
-
- From: samant@CS.UCHICAGO.EDU
- >
- > >>Suppose they all did originate
- > >>in Shakespeare's mind/imagination. Can 'we' not say they were born
- > >>out of nothing?
- > >
- > >Shakespeare's brain is not nothing.
- >
- > Can someone write up an understandable summary of this exchange? What
- > is the information content of the sentence "words come from somewhere"?
- >
- > tushar
-
- I somewhat playfully (but apparently without making that clear), suggested
- that words can errupt or slink in from nowhere, as, according to some, did
- the universe. Given my lack of clarity, Karen rightly called me for
- spouting bullshit. On second thought, it occured to me that words which
- come out of a writer's mind/imagination do come out of nothing. I cited
- *The Joy of Lex*'s statement that W.Shakespeare 'created' some 1400 or
- 1700 (I don't remember JofL's exact number) words in such a manor.
-
- The question now, as I see it, is whether words originating in the
- human imagination can be said to come from nowhere. It may well be
- that Shakespeare's brain was not *nothing* (now it's probably less than
- dust in a bunghole), but that doesn't necessarily apply to his
- imagination.
-
- Peter
-