Archive for March, 2009

The use and misuse of quoting people

In doing research for writing books you notice funny things.

Sometimes you discover a saying attributed to two different people, and the right attribution is actually less popular than the wrong one (In my case I misattributed a quote to Goethe, as many authors have).  Other times people snip a quote in such a way that it is divorced from  the context in which the writer intended.

One case in point is this famous saying from Emerson:

A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds.

The quote is from his essay called self-reliance, an essay about learning about yourself. Which is a good thing to do.

The problem is it’s easy to lob off those first two words and have an entirely different quote.

Consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds.

Same sentence, different meaning. A meaning that Emerson never intended and clearly disagreed with. But by using this well worn phrase in a different way, some kind of violation of intention has taken place. It’s not what the author meant. The writer using the quote is co-opting the work of the other guy to suit his own purposes.

This problem can be minimized, but it’s hard to avoid entirely. There are too many misquotings in too many good or popular books, to either verify quotes before using them, or get secondary references for all sources. The web does help catch these things, but preventing them is another matter.

The problems get worse with fiction.

There is a Stephen King quote bouncing around the web that goes like this:

God is cruel, sometimes he makes you live.

As best I can tell, the quote comes from a novel he wrote called Desperation. However another version of the quote is listed this way:

Do you know how cruel your God can be, David. How fantastically cruel? …Sometimes he makes us live.

Which version would you use? Probably the one that’s shorter. This sort of thing happens all the time, such as in the story of the quote known as Murphy’s law. Sometimes the quote gets better over time, even as it distances itself from what the attributed author actually wrote or said.

The surprise is that both versions can be found at the same source, wikiquote. Here’s the first and here’s the second. At least wikiquote attributes quotes to their sources, which many quote books and websites do not.

In any case the quote is from a work of fiction. King, the author, may have written this sentence for purposes that serve the book. He may not actually believe this sentence. Or maybe he does. Only he knows. You can find similar quoting issues where an author gets attributed for something one of his character says, which is really quite a different thing than saying it themselves.

For the writers out there, it’s worth taking a moment to find out where a quote comes before you use it. Even just to know what book it’s from, and if it’s fiction or non-fiction.  If you’re using a quote as the main anchor to support your major point, dig up the reference and read the paragraph before and after the quote – it will make a huge difference in respecting what the writer  intended. And hopefully writers in the future will do the same with your work.

Sadly few quote compendiums bother to provide any references at all.

Friday Linkfest

Here are these week’s interesting reads:

(Seattle) Presentation camp schedule up!

Saturday April 4th Kathy Gill and I are running the first ever Seattle presentation camp, an unconference for people interested in all forms of public speaking, presenting, and pitching ideas.

We’ve posted the core  schedule with some of the sessions that we know will take place, as well as plenty of slots for unconference style sessions (you, as an a attendee, can suggest or run a session yourself).

Presentation Camp Schedule – Sat April 4th

Session include Ignite’s Brady Forest talking about how to speak at major conferences, I’ll be speaking on skills I learned from being on national TV as well as how to get over fears of public speaking, Kathy Gill from UW will be talking about Presentation Zen and Slideshare, and plenty more good stuff.

Registration is just $10, enough to cover the basic costs for the cool rooms we’ve got at the UW for the event.

It’s a new event so we’re open to ideas, volunteers and other contributions.  Get in touch with Kathy or I.

Hope to see you there – and help spread the word if you can.  Facebook event and Upcomming event pages are up.

  • By Scott Berkun on March 25th, 2009
  • 3 Comments »
  • quote of the x

Quote of the day

“An intelligent hell would better than a stupid paradise”

-Victor Hugo

And the $600 Golden Ticket winner is…

First, thanks to everyone for entering the contest.

The overlord / demigods at O’Reilly saw the long list of people who wanted a free ticket to Monday’s class in SF and blessed me with two tickets.

The winners are Brandie and Chris. Woohoo! Congrats guys!

I sent an email out to both of you. Please RSVP to me with 24 hours, otherwise I’ll give the tickets away to someone else.

For the rest of you: as of this writing there are still one or two seats left. You can still sign up for Monday’s class, and at a nice juicy %25 discount, by going here and using the code berkunproj.

How to lead and manage breakthrough projects

Ada Lovelace could kick your ass

Few people know that Ada Lovelace was likely the first computer programmer in history. She worked with Charles Babbage, a man who is most famous for making a machine that didn’t quite work. A testament to the role of failure in the making of every success.

One challenge she faced is that given that his computer, known as the Babbage engine, wasn’t quite working, she had to write a virtual program. That’s right. She wrote code for a system that didn’t quite exist yet (To be specific, she translated a paper from French to English and in doing so added notes, which included a program – her actual translation, and notes, are here). Not too shabby.  If you complain about your compiler being slow, or about web standards not being followed, take a humility pill. At least the stuff you hate actually exists.

I just try and imagine the conversations she must have had with her friends in 1843.

Friend: So Ada, what did you do yesterday? I went for a horse ride and picked some flowers.

Ada: “Oh that sounds fun. Well, I translated a paper about a lecture, written about a new application of math to make a machine that can do complex computations on its own  and just for fun and I wrote up the instruction set to compute Bernoulli numbers automatically on this machine. Which doesn’t exist yet.”

Friend: <silence> That’s nice. Go for a horse ride?

Perhaps if you’re truly an innovator, you often have trouble explaining what you’re doing.

Sadly Ada died young, at age 36. The programming language Ada was named after her.

One of my favorite quote from her famous note is this:

It is desirable to guard against the possibility of exaggerated ideas that might arise as to the powers of the Analytical Engine. In considering any new subject, there is frequently a tendency, first, to overrate what we find to be already interesting or remarkable; and, secondly, by a sort of natural reaction, to undervalue the true state of the case, when we do discover that our notions have surpassed those that were really tenable.

The Analytical Engine has no pretensions whatever to originate anything. It can do whatever we know how to order it to perform. It can follow analysis; but it has no power of anticipating any analytical relations or truths.

She was writing about Babbage’s machine, but boy does it seem relevant to all the technologies we make.

Ada was born on March 24th -  Some folks celebrate March 24th as Ada Lovelace day.

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