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Feedback: Gone to a better conference

Canine light of knowledge extinguished for ever, paper passes over space-time cracks, skeuomorphic symbol and sign and more
Feedback: Gone to a better conference
(Image: Paul McDevitt)

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

Gone to a better conference

SADLY, Feedback must record the passing of a favourite academic author and faithful correspondent. Cleo Borzoi’s copious output includes the classic “Harnessing angular kinetic energy from colossal cloned Rodentia: re-envisioning the hamster wheel model in green energy management” (described here on 15 June 2013).

On 11 June, the day on which she passed away, Cleo received an urgent query from the organisers of the in Dalian, China, about her planned presentation “Aquadog: Use of trained border collies to herd fish and protect them in vulnerable marine aquaculture facilities”. Her literary executor, Phillip Clapham, notes that “the only thing stupider than a conference accepting a ridiculous paper authored by a dog is a conference accepting a ridiculous paper authored by a dead dog. Fear not, Cleo will live on!”

The London Evening Standard correctly reported “more than 7 million cubic centimetres of concrete” in 1940s European coastal defences. Alastair Robertson asks: what’s that in elephants? Three, at 6 tonnes

Paper over space-time cracks

INTENSE surprise was the reaction of a journalist colleague who was recently asked to referee a paper entitled “Fiber-Optic Cables Considered Harmful” submitted to the . Had they been mistaken for an academic? Or was the request slyly apt?

A famous web search engine quickly identified the text as a generated in 2005 by some mischievous souls at MIT and their (15 August 2009). The original went missing after being submitted to an apparently bogus conference at the time, but a copy has fallen through a wormhole in the multiverse to the journal in question. Was its editor aware that our colleague had written about spoof papers for Feedback?

For the record

MOMENTS after Feedback went to the printers, we spotted a brain fart. We had said that “Andrew Doble’s bank annoyingly limits his online transfers to £999,999,999,999,999.99 – some 56 times the US national debt” and asked “What does it know about inflation that we don’t?” (21 June). The for US national debt was at the time $17,544,440,933,912.98. So, now remembering the – £1 = $1.70 as this went to press – the limit was some 97 times the US debt. Had we known that the pound sterling would hit parity with the dollar this week, we’d be richer.

Crumbling without foundations

WHILE in confessional mode, we congratulate Peter Verity for asking: “is Feedback channelling Aleister Crowley?” We noted that “the idea of a metaphor without foundation just needs a name. Translating that description into Greek seems to add gravitas: ‘athelemic metaphors’, we think” (26 April).

We had asked an online translation service for the Greek for “foundation”. We may be suffering late-onset dyslexia: the transliteration of is “themelio“. Or were we misled by our desire to create an antonym to the late occultist Crowley’s “law of Thelema” – “do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law”? Whoops.

Skeuomorphic symbol and sign

SO ARE metaphors without foundation “athemelic”? Brian Darvell also spotted the Crowley reference, which we acknowledge above is incorrect – and compared the underlying concept to the widespread use of outdated images, such as the roll-film box camera on signs warning of all-electronic speed cameras.

Ah, those would be skeuomorphs – which word we believe covers “gestures that refer back to a meaning that is no longer relevant, such as Anita Gait’s ‘air scribble’ when requesting the bill in a restaurant” (28 May 2011).

Arthur Prent, catching up on back issues, suggested recently that this gesture represents not the manual signing of a cheque, but the still older request to a waiter to please write out the bill by hand.

Those scribbles, speed camera signs, the steam locomotives warning of electric trains crossing and the cardboard file folders on your computer screen (13 August 2011) are all, in a sense, metaphors realised in two or three dimensions. Will “skeuomorph” do, then?

Metaphors once upon a time

AND, Michael Truscott asks, “Can you have a metaphor that isn’t founded, at some point, in the past?” He offers “apologies for the pedantry – but as a lawyer it’s one of the things I enjoy about Feedback”. We now attempt to construct and deploy a metaphor that has never had a foundation in reality. We tried doing it from the rich seam that is legal language, but are now mining works acknowledged as fiction instead. May the Force may be with us.

Between rocks and hard places

FINALLY, one of the most widely used metaphors without foundation, says David Holdsworth, is “lowest common denominator”, which is invariably used to refer to the highest common factor. Considering whether to set out an explanation for the hypothetical puzzled reader, while not requiring the construction of an extension to this page, we found ourselves between a rock and a hard place.

Investigation of that phrase led to its likely foundations in the history of a in 1917: see .

We instead leave the arithmetic as an exercise for the reader and suggest a name for the phenomenon that David mentions: “wrong”.

Article amended on 1 January 1970

When this article was first published, it attributed the curious choice of concrete volume measurements to the wrong London newspaper.

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