As Gabriel García Márquez, the great Columbian Nobel prize winner, once said:
Jubilemos la ortografía, terror del ser humano.
Let us retire spelling, terror of the human being from the cradle.

On 8/13/07, Richard Heck <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Stefano Baroni wrote:
> > I do not like on the fly spellcheck either (among other nuisances, it
> > forces me to change the default language everytime I switch from one
> > language to another). However: 1) when writing short letters it may be
> > useful; 2) I do not think it is a good idea to tell people what they
> > should like and what they shouldn't. Just an opinion ...
> What they like is up to them. But I teach writing, so I think I get to
> tell people what helps with writing and what does not.
>
> rh
> > SB
> >
> > On Aug 13, 2007, at 6:44 PM, Richard Heck wrote:
> >
> >> Sam Lewis wrote:
> >>>> Of course. And anyone who wants to code this can do so. This was in
> >>>> response to the suggestion that LyX lacked this incredibly
> >>>> wonderful and painfully obvious feature. My point was that it isn't
> >>>> obviously wonderful. Indeed, I'd go so far as to say that, if you
> >>>> think you want it, you're either wrong or not very focused on
> >>>> writing. But to each his or her own.
> >>>>
> >>> Thanks Richard for the discursive effort! I'm seriously
> >>> reconsidering my
> >>> understanding of WYSIWYG and its typesetting counterpart. I used to
> >>> think that
> >>> focusing on writing means also paying attention to the order of
> >>> letters, rather
> >>> than assuming that this something to do with "style".
> >>>
> >> No offense intended. But the point is an important one, anyway. I
> >> actually do think that paying too much attention to the order of the
> >> letters impedes writing. If I'm trying to write a paragraph and know
> >> I'm going to change it half a dozen times (at least), why do I care
> >> whether each word has been spelled correctly? That's clean-up, to be
> >> done once I've got the damn thing moderately stable. (That's why I
> >> still write so much with pen and paper, because it's the only way I
> >> know to really get rid of ALL the distractions.) Writing is hard, and
> >> I am firmly convinced that the tools we have grown accustomed to do
> >> not make our lives easier. Those bad habits are hard to unlearn,
> >> especially if you're not even aware you've got them.
> >>
> >> If I'm just writing a letter, then maybe that's different, but even
> >> then I'm not sure, actually.
> >>> Either way, one thing for sure out of this discussion is that
> >>> perhaps the
> >>> boundaries between "style" and "mere writing" are not as clear cut.
> >>> Also, of
> >>> course, if your texts consists of many formula or a mass of strings
> >>> of letters
> >>> which are not in your dictionary, a on the fly spellcheck becomes
> >>> utterly
> >>> pointless (yes distracting!) and should be switched off. However,
> >>> this is
> >>> exactly what I was trying to say with my (in hindsight probably not
> >>> very clever)
> >>> example of "humanities" writing. For some people, there might not be
> >>> much
> >>> distraction (in form of occasional wavily lines), but rather a
> >>> continually
> >>> indication of your document writing status, which I consider is a
> >>> basic feature.
> >>>
> >> Maybe this is true of some documents, and maybe it'd be nice at some
> >> very late stage of the game, when you're just doing clean-up. But I
> >> just offer the suggestion that a continual indication of the status
> >> of a document that is very much in flux is worse than useless.
> >>
> >> Richard
> >>
> >> --==================================================================
> >> Richard G Heck, Jr
> >> Professor of Philosophy
> >> Brown University
> >> http://frege.brown.edu/heck/
> >> ==================================================================
> >> Get my public key from http://sks.keyserver.penguin.de
> >> Hash: 0x1DE91F1E66FFBDEC
> >> Learn how to sign your email using Thunderbird and GnuPG at:
> >> http://dudu.dyn.2-h.org/nist/gpg-enigmail-howto
> >
> > ---
> > Stefano Baroni - SISSA  &  DEMOCRITOS National Simulation Center -
> > Trieste
> > [+39] 040 3787 406 (tel) -528 (fax) / stefanobaroni (skype)
> >
> > Please, if possible, don't  send me MS Word or PowerPoint attachments
> > Why? See:  http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/no-word-attachments.html
> >
> >
> >
> >
>
>
> --
> ==================================================================
> Richard G Heck, Jr
> Professor of Philosophy
> Brown University
> http://frege.brown.edu/heck/
> ==================================================================
> Get my public key from http://sks.keyserver.penguin.de
> Hash: 0x1DE91F1E66FFBDEC
> Learn how to sign your email using Thunderbird and GnuPG at:
> http://dudu.dyn.2-h.org/nist/gpg-enigmail-howto
>
>


-- 
-------------------------------------------------
Julio Rojas
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to