That doesn't sound like a muffin, frowned Pliny the Elder.
You mean my lunch the other day? Why not? I asked.
A muffin is a bread product, said Pliny, baked in small batches.
The modern muffin is more like a large cupcake, I said. That's what my lunch looked like.
But, argued Pliny, it was made from risotto.
It was shaped like a muffin, I insisted. So it was a muffin. I imagine it was baked in a muffin tray.
That does not make it a muffin, said Pliny. If I baked a lump of clay in a muffin tray, would it be a muffin?
Is this a cooking question or an art question? I asked.
I'm merely pointing out, said Pliny, that you have made an inference where no inference is due.
An object in the shape of a muffin, I said, implies a muffin tray, and a muffin tray implies a muffin.
No object implies the existence of any other, remarked Pliny.
Now that rings a bell, I said , trying to recall where I'd heard it.
Hume's Mirror, said Pliny. Don't you remember?
Monday, June 7, 2010
Inferences and Implications
Labels:
art,
clay,
cooking,
cupcake,
Hume's Mirror,
muffin,
muffin tray,
risotto
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