★ Merlin Mann on creativity/home/ianhocki/public_html/wordpress/wp-content/themes/purity/page.php

Feb 26

2009

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★ Merlin Mann on creativity

Merlin Mann will be well known to the Mac-using read­ers of this blog. For those who don’t recog­nise his name, Merlin has long been asso­ci­ated with pro­ductiv­ity and cre­ativ­ity. I’ve just fin­ished watch­ing his Macworld 2009 talk. He exam­ines the dicho­tomy between being cre­at­ive and want­ing to be.
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Feb 26

2009

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★ Don’t f*ck with the Pack

Scott Pack, pub­lisher with The Friday Project (HarperCollins), has a blog on which he provides bet­ting tips, reviews, and snip­pets of news relat­ing to the pub­lish­ing industry. His reviews are often detailed. Sometimes they are short. One of his short reviews was read by the author and storm of tea-cup sized pro­por­tions has broken out.

Oh dear. I seem to have upset someone with one of my reviews.

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Feb 26

2009

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How old are certain words?

Researchers at Reading University have built a model of how word use has changed over the last forty thou­sand years. Mark Pagel, the bio­lo­gist behind the model, says:

When we speak to each other we’re play­ing this massive game of Chinese whispers.

The BBC report goes on:

What the research­ers found was that the fre­quency with which a word is used relates to how slowly it changes through time, so that the most com­mon words tend to be the old­est ones. For example, the words “I” and “who” are among the old­est, long with the words “two”, “three”, and “five”. The word “one” is only slightly younger.

Fascinating stuff. I have some reser­va­tions about the assump­tions made by the model, but it’s cer­tainly the case that words with the highest fre­quency are those most irreg­u­lar (i.e. are the least sub­ject­ive to reg­u­lar­ising forces). That’s why the verb ‘to be’ in English can get so crazy in its tenses, from ‘am’ to ‘was’. A word can only keep that kind of unique­ness if it’s being spoken often. Low fre­quency irreg­u­lars tend to die out.

Thanks to Katharine Fletcher for the heads-up.

BBC NEWS | Science & Environment | ‘Oldest English words’ identified