èƵ

Feedback: Plumbing to be proud of

Papering over some differences, Platonists deny patentability, paradoxical numbers' plethora and more
Feedback: Plumbing to be proud of
(Image: Paul McDevitt)

Feedback is our weekly column of bizarre stories, implausible advertising claims, confusing instructions and more

Plumbing to be proud of

FEEDBACK’S random-access piling system has thrown up Wayne Plummer’s intriguing photograph of a sign in a hotel in Saffron Walden, UK. “This en-suite bathroom,” it declares, “is fitted with a Saniflow toilet which will not allow alien products to pass through its system…”

Has the European Space Agency been informed of this advanced detector of extraterrestrial matter?

Max Lang was the first reader to forward a photo of a sign in a cycleway reading “Caution: signage in cycle way”. Yes. Tautologies are true. Why, though?

Papering over differences

RESPONSES to our sceptical inquiry into figures for annual consumption of toilet paper (3 May) continue to fill our virtual mailbag. Ian Buchanan follows up on an observation we quoted that “the British Army stocked toilet paper on the assumption that the soldier would use three sheets per day; the American ration was twenty-two and a half sheets” (7 June). He recalls that the British paper was the hard stuff – “thin, smooth, air and water resistant, an excellent medium for letter-writing and also escape maps for downed airmen, I believe”.

Alan Chattaway concurs: “It’s not hard to see how three sheets would do the job of 22.5 sheets of fluff pulp.” Robert Cailliau observes that US paper is still “terribly thin”, whereas Swiss paper “is thick and soft, and that’s where we buy ours, though we live in France”. Then Brian Darvell chips in with the observation that in Hong Kong the paper is very absorbent: he has commonly found a roll on restaurant tables for general mopping-up use.

Perplexing pagination

FEEDBACK reader Bob Lang has another papyrological question: why has èƵ recently acquired odd single-leaf pages? Further: “Since the loose pages all appear on the left-hand side of the staples, I can only assume that this is reflecting some bias on the part of the printers.”

Our production editor explains that we have switched to a press that prints 64 pages “in one big hit”. Printing a number not divisible exactly by 64 produces what are called, in the trade, “guards”.

This gives us a further example of topology affecting publication on paper. We earlier observed the pesky First Directive of publishing: “the words must go all the way to the bottom right-hand corner and no further” (11 February 2012). And are we now in some sense a tad closer to Feedback’s lifelong ambition to edit a paper publication with an odd number of pages?

Paper nomenclature puzzle

MEANWHILE we must face questions about toilet paper nomenclature. Stefan Bojczuk is puzzled by the unit of rate of use in the New York Times we cited: “rolls per capita per year”(3 May). “Surely rolls per anus per annum?” he suggests.

Platonists deny patentability

SOMEHOW this discussion drew Feedback back to databases of patents. Specifically, to look up , filed by Roger Penrose on 25 June 1976, covering uses of non-periodical “tiling” of surfaces.

The patent’s first unusual feature was that its validity depended on your position on the philosophy of mathematics. A strict Platonist, for example, would be someone who agrees with the Greek philosopher Plato that the pattern, like all other mathematics, already existed in the space of “ideal forms”. So it would be waiting to be discovered, and therefore not patentable.

The other point of interest is that Penrose is reported to have sued the Kleenex company for using a non-periodic pattern on toilet paper. we have so far found, however, seem to mix up patent and copyright law. The patent has expired.

Property of Her Majesty

THE legality of toilet paper leads us to Noel Cramer’s “amusement, visiting the Science Museum in London in the early 1960s, to see on each sheet of paper the printed words ‘Government Property’ “. That led him to “steal” part of a roll – “which has unfortunately gone lost since”. That reminds Feedback of acquiring some of the same stock while making an appearance at the Royal Courts of Justice in the 1970s. There is a statute of limitations, isn’t there?

Paradoxical numbers’ plethora

FINALLY, and returning to matters mathematical, several readers were suitably puzzled by Todd Moody’s definition of “ineffable numbers” as “the real numbers that cannot be individually named by any finite string of symbols in any language” (14 June). Tony Kline “sat for far too long contemplating the sentence ‘nothing cannot be named in any language’ until finally escaping from paradox by summoning the non-existent ghost of Bertrand Russell and quietly strangling it.” Todd refers, of course, to Russell’s paradox, concerning the barber who shaves all the villagers who do not shave themselves.

Jeremy Colman and Ken Zetie give essentially the same argument for the number of such numbers being zero. As Ken puts it: “Suppose there are two. Then you could name them ‘the first ineffable number’ and ‘the second ineffable number’.”

Feedback thinks this may be an example of “second-order naming” and cheating. But for discussion of this topic takes us no further than the of the late-Roman philosopher and theologian and a headache. Help?

More from èƵ

Explore the latest news, articles and features