In co-operation with an intelligent joiner I would undertake to defeat any definition of chair or chairishness that you gave me. — First and Last Things
... an exhibition in some unlikely museum of applied logic of a series of "chairs" differing in quality by least noticeable amounts. At one end of a long line, containing perhaps thousands of exhibits, might be a Chippendale chair: at the other, a small nondescript lump of wood. — Vagueness: an exercise in logical analysis
chairs that pass into benches, chairs that cross the boundary and become settees
In seeking critique regarding how well written something is, are you asking for objective criticism or subjective criticism? How well something is written can be subjective. Why would you want to know how well written something is for a specific person unless you intended on communicating your idea to just that person? Something is well written if it gets the idea across.The point is to write something and give and/or receive critique regarding how well written it is and/or debate the ideas embedded. — I like sushi
You’ll get the same from me either way — I like sushi
A chair, or not a chair? That was Max Black's question. At least, it was the question he felt bound to refashion, along the now familiar lines of fuzzy logic: whereabouts is this or that object on the "chair spectrum"? — bongo fury
time’s up! — I like sushi
The First Chair
A small
Rickety
Wooden chair
Sits in
The shadowy
Corner. — I like sushi
The ‘First Chair’ here is, funnily enough, a means to furnish a narrative — I like sushi
that reveals something intrinsically human about our modes of thinking and how they adapt. No one really thinks there was some ‘First Chair,’ a eureka moment where an inspired carpenter rushed to their workshop to fashion their furniture idea. — I like sushi
Such is merely a flight of fancy to highlight — I like sushi
how humans have explored the space they’ve found themselves a part of, and apart from, and managed to extract and contain this space in varying states of permanence through which a common yet often unconscious need has expressed itself and perpetuated through multiple cultural iterations. — I like sushi
What would it have been to a human to create the very ‘First Chair’? Not merely to select a spot and sit down, but to actually fashion an item meant for the sole purpose of planting one’s posterior on. — I like sushi
We could imagine a scene, millennia ago, where humans congregated at the day’s end to partake in social relations. They undoubtedly rested in this period, and therefore likely sat rather than stood. Would they have always sat in the same position or order relative to their fellows? Would that day’s achiever have had first choice of spot? Was there a strong social hierarchy involved that was symbolically reflected by each person’s position within the group? — I like sushi
Given the sparse dispersion of prehistoric humans it seems reasonable to assume — I like sushi
that different cultural habits would’ve emerged where some tribe’s members — I like sushi
attached social value to ‘sitting positions’ as a marker for status, and others would’ve perhaps have been mostly, if not completely, unconcerned with such habits and rituals of daily social life. — I like sushi
Such daily social occasions are clearly of high import to human society due to their frequency, — I like sushi
A nomadic lifestyle would mean prehistoric tribes would likely have only carried what was deemed ‘necessary’. A Chair would probably not have been deemed ‘necessary,’ — I like sushi
but soft materials to sit on and possibly a piece of material for support (be it a tool/weapon of some description) to form a more ‘purposeful’ sitting space: still, not a ‘chair’. To have meaningfully constructed a ‘chair’ would be something quite different. — I like sushi
Such is merely a flight of fancy to highlight how humans have explored the space they’ve found themselves a part of, and apart from, and managed to extract and contain this space in varying states of permanence through which a common yet often unconscious need has expressed itself and perpetuated through multiple cultural iterations. — I like sushi
I want to support the underdog, and argue that the absolutist intuition that seems — bongo fury
"Chair" has no immediate antonym or 'anti-chair' — bongo fury
So 'data' about the one limits the theoretical reach of the other. So 'chair' means 'definite non-settee' and 'settee' means 'definite non-chair'. — bongo fury
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