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- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!ub!acsu.buffalo.edu!kriman
- From: kriman@acsu.buffalo.edu (Alfred M. Kriman)
- Newsgroups: sci.math
- Subject: Indices (was Re: Littlewood's Three Principles)
- Message-ID: <BtDLo0.587@acsu.buffalo.edu>
- Date: 22 Aug 92 08:16:47 GMT
- References: <16bjm1INNesk@function.mps.ohio-state.edu> <l8in8tINNnq3@roundup.crhc.uiuc.edu> <16di3cINNpd2@function.mps.ohio-state.edu>
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- In <16di3cINNpd2@function.mps.ohio-state.edu> (an article acknowledging net
- assistance finding a Littlewood quote), Gerald Edgar
- (edgar@function.mps.ohio-state.edu) complains:
- >One of my most frequent complaints about technical books is inadequate
- >(or even nonexistent) index!
-
- My two cents: I believe that Kurt Vonnegut has one of his characters
- complain that authors should not write the indices of their own work,
- because the writing of a good index is a specialized professional task
- they rarely are suited for. I think this appears in
- _God bless you, Mr. Rosewater_ (which I don't have near to hand),
- and I also think that book has no index.
- -------
- "Reading is sometimes an ingenious device for avoiding thought."
- [_Friends in Council_, Sir Arthur Helps]
- (Or work.)
-