On Mon, 6 Sep 1999, Russell Standish wrote: > > On Fri, 3 Sep 1999, Russell Standish wrote: > > > > > Then maybe I misunderstood you. A tautology is a term with redundant > > > > > parts, ie it is equivalent to some subset of itself. I took your > > > > > statement that "ASSA is a tautology" to mean that ASSA is equivalent > > > > > to SSA (symbolically ASSA <=> SSA). I directly contradict this in my > > > > > first sentence. > > > > > > > > > [JM wrote] > > > > From WordNet (r) 1.6 (wn) > > > > tautology n 1: (in logic) a statement that is necessarily true; "the > > > > statement `he is brave or he is not brave' is a tautology" 2: useless > > > > repetition; "to say that something is `adequate enough' is a tautology" > > > > > > > > I was not aware of meaning 2 of the word, while I have > > > > frequently encountered the word used for meaning 1. > > > > > > > The definition I gave and the one you quoted are equivalent. > > > > I quoted two very different definitions. The one you gave is > > equivalent to #2. The one I meant in my 'zombie wives' post was #1. > > Sorry, I missed the second definition. It is merely a colloquial > generalisation of definition 1, and is definitely the one I was using.
Generalization? That's BS. They are totally different. Example of def. 1: A or not A Example of def. 2: A and A - - - - - - - Jacques Mallah ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) Graduate Student / Many Worlder / Devil's Advocate "I know what no one else knows" - 'Runaway Train', Soul Asylum My URL: http://pages.nyu.edu/~jqm1584/