The Language Contest
By Alex Gross
http://language.home.sprynet.com
alexilen@sprynet.com
Fifty contestants enter a large hall. Inside the hall are
fifty desks. Each contestant sits down at oneof the desks.
On each desk is a large weirdly shaped package. All the packages
on all the desks have the same size and shape. They all jut
out and scoop inwards in strange ways, and they all have a
large number of surfaces at odd angles to each other. Some
of the surfaces are very hard to the touch, some very soft.
All the packages are exactly the same in this regard. They
are in fact identical in every way.
Next to each package is a small pile of wrapping paper, tape,
perhaps some string. None of the piles of wrapping materials
is the same. In some the wrapping paper comes in one or more
sheets of different sizes, in others it comes in rolls or
strips, in yet others it is nothing more than fragments or
badly wrinkled shreds. The tape too comes in a weird variety
of shapes, sizes, and quantities.
The string, on those desks that have it, may be anything
from a half-full spool of thread to a thickly encrusted length
of clothes line. A pair of scissors is also provided. In fact,
the only uniform property possessed by these various piles,
other than the scissors, is the known fact, announced to the
contestants beforehand, that no one of the piles of materials
is sufficient to wrap the package completely, regardless of
the ingenuity of the contestants. The best any of them will
be able to achieve is to wrap about 90% of the package, with
about 10% remaining uncovered.
This, the principle rule of the contest, is now formally
announced to the fifty participants. They must use all their
knowledge and skills to wrap the package as completely as
possible, using only the pile of materials on the desk next
to the package. They will be judged according to their success
in this task.
A few informal rules are also believed to be true by some
contestants but not by others. One such rule alleges that
it is possible to cheat by not following all the contours
of the package and letting the wrapping material stretch from
edge to edge over a hollow between surfaces. Others have heard
this rule but believe they may be penalized if they do not
cover all the surfaces. Others say that the whole game is
an enormous put-on, but one must play along in order to be
promoted. Some have also heard that one is awarded higher
points for the dextrous use of the scissors, others believe
one will be penalized for using the scissors too often.
Contestants employ various strategies in wrapping their packages.
Some try to cover as large a surface as possible, leaving
the unwrapped area as the very last portion of the package,
when their materials run out. Some try to hide this space
in some less easily visible contour of the package. Others,
in their eagerness to cover space, do not care where this
space ends up. A few, dependent on their supplies or their
use of the scissors, try out a postage stamp technique, taping
small pieces of paper on all surfaces of the box, with the
unfilled space intervening on all sides.
The package is reality, with all its odd contours and escarpments.
The piles of wrapping paper, tape and string are our languages
(most certainly including our computer languages as well)
with all their odd, arbitrary rules and connective structures.
The places where the contestants fail to follow the package's
contours are the places where our language (anyone's language)
lies to us about reality. The scissors are probably akin to
various odd ideas of grammar and usage that we keep on teaching
and tending to believe. The places which cannot be covered
by the tape or paper are those parts of reality none can escape:
birth, death, hunger, animal passion in its positive and negative
aspects.
It is finally announced that none of the wrapping procedures
is necessarily better than the others. This message is received
amidst much booing, as many contestants are quite convinced
that their method of wrapping is clearly the best.
Still others complain that hundreds of other possible contestants
were not invited to take part, while some voice the claim
that the contest is too simple-minded because everyone receives
the same reality/package, contrary to "true" reality,
which may differ from people to people, culture to culture,
coordinately with language.
The judges give up and leave. No prizes are awarded.
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