In a message dated 4/23/2009 1:53:42 AM Pacific Daylight Time, dgerard@gmail.com writes:
I think they do have meaning on an objective factual level. e.g. If the NYT gets a birthdate wrong and this error is perpetuated, that doesn't make it right however well cited it is.
But that's a detail, not the point. Is there a formulation of what I said (the necessity of immediatism, the lack of the luxury of eventualism) that you'd agree with?>>
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About birthdates that's an interesting tricky problem isn't it? I'm reading the autobiography of Katherine Hepburn and she rather pointedly says "I'm xxx years old no matter what I've ever said before."
She is admitting that she has given interviews in which she fudged her own birthdate. A perfect example of "right" and "wrong" having no meaning from our point of view. She knew the date, she just never told anyone and we can cite several articles where she should have been born in year XXX and much later we find out, she was actually born in year YYY.
The question really should be "Is there any evidence for this?" Not "is this right?"
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