From: Damien Broderick (damien@ariel.ucs.unimelb.edu.au)
Date: Sat Jan 25 1997 - 20:06:28 MST
At 05:59 PM 1/25/97 -0600, Eli wrote:
>[Damien Broderick:]
>>
>> (Damasio's Error being not to call it DESCARTES'S ERROR)
>A common misconception. Descartes' Error is correct; so is Moses'
>Bible. Chalmers's philosophy or Janet Morris's science fiction is
>another matter. You see, *ancient* names *are* apostrophe-only. Modern
>names are apostrophe-and-s.
Hm. As so often, Eliezer might be right for the wrong reason. I don't
speak French, but I do know that an unvoiced terminal French consonant
becomes voiced when it's followed by a word starting with a vowel. Since
Damasio's book is in English, I took it that it ought to be pronounced
Day-Kart Error, which does not roll trippingly from the tongue. Perhaps a
Gallic transform would indeed make it Day-kart's Error. Bof!
This is really deep extropian philosophy, hey?
Damien Broderick
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