PhilW wrote:A toilet seat? (I can just see Derek coming home to his mum and dad, waving his prized new possession made in woodwork).
You can tell Daniel is keen to win.
A question, if we're allowed - was this something you chose to make, or were told to make?
None of the above.
I seem to remember that there was a choice of two or three items to be made and I chose this one.
An obscure hint: the item was used by my parents for many years. Without modification, its purpose changed from around 1982 onwards.
"The first duty of Port is to be red" Ernest H. Cockburn
PhilW wrote:A toilet seat? (I can just see Derek coming home to his mum and dad, waving his prized new possession made in woodwork).
You can tell Daniel is keen to win.
A question, if we're allowed - was this something you chose to make, or were told to make?
None of the above.
I seem to remember that there was a choice of two or three items to be made and I chose this one.
An obscure hint: the item was used by my parents for many years. Without modification, its purpose changed from around 1982 onwards.
A bit of wood for them to beat you with? You were 17 in 1982 and thus too big for them to beat. From them on it was hung on the wall, where it remains to this day, inspiring fond memories for all - a real Turnbull family conversation piece!
Daniel J.
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
djewesbury wrote:A bit of wood for them to beat you with? You were 17 in 1982 and thus too big for them to beat. From them on it was hung on the wall, where it remains to this day, inspiring fond memories for all - a real Turnbull family conversation piece!
No.
"The first duty of Port is to be red" Ernest H. Cockburn
djewesbury wrote:A pipe rack
A boot rack
A walking stick rack
A coal scuttle
A bus driver
A terribly good period novel
Oops more than one guess.
All incorrect, but will be rejected one at a time as other guesses come in so you need to wait for six more guesses from other people before you are allowed another guess.
"The first duty of Port is to be red" Ernest H. Cockburn
jdaw1 wrote:The answer to Daniel’s question is 1+e^(iπ). Like Derek’s, really.
Are you trying to suggest that Daniel is more mathematically beautiful than me? How can you possibly say that when we have never seen what is under that beard?
"The first duty of Port is to be red" Ernest H. Cockburn
I thought we'd agreed that this forum would be conducted in English. This is the last warning - any more of this and I'm bringing in the poststructuralists. Then you'll be sorry.
Daniel J.
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
That could fit here. Does a bottle of, say, Graham 1985, have a single “identity as a stable "self" with a single, discernible” flavour? Or is each bottle — in a less-cryptic version of a post-structuralist’s words, each reading of each work of each author — experienced differently? Perhaps Port drinkers are merely repressed post-structuralists.
djewesbury wrote:I thought we'd agreed that this forum would be conducted in English. This is the last warning - any more of this and I'm bringing in the poststructuralists. Then you'll be sorry.
I'll see your Derrida and raise you a Foucault. Go on, you know you want to...
djewesbury wrote:I thought we'd agreed that this forum would be conducted in English. This is the last warning - any more of this and I'm bringing in the poststructuralists. Then you'll be sorry.
I'll see your Derrida and raise you a Foucault. Go on, you know you want to...
I for one would be far happier if we did than if we just posted random symbols. And while we're at it I'll happily bring along Deleuze and Guattari, Walter Benjamin and Georges Bataille. And what about Guy Debord?
Daniel J.
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
The suggestion of randomness emphasises Charles Snow’s division. Each symbol is deep with meaning; the relationship between them is both inevitable and astonishing.
djewesbury wrote:I thought we'd agreed that this forum would be conducted in English. This is the last warning - any more of this and I'm bringing in the poststructuralists. Then you'll be sorry.
I'll see your Derrida and raise you a Foucault. Go on, you know you want to...
The pendulum swings first one way and then the other while the world rotates underneath it. There is a fine example I. The science museum, if I remember my youth accurately.
Top Ports in 2024: Niepoort 1900 Colheita, b.1971. A near perfect Port.
2025: Quevedo 1972 Colheita, b.2024. Just as good as Niepoort 1900!
djewesbury wrote:I thought we'd agreed that this forum would be conducted in English. This is the last warning - any more of this and I'm bringing in the poststructuralists. Then you'll be sorry.
I'll see your Derrida and raise you a Foucault. Go on, you know you want to...
The pendulum swings first one way and then the other while the world rotates underneath it. There is a fine example I. The science museum, if I remember my youth accurately.
Also in the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles; and is there still anything in the Panthéon, or was that just the site of the initial demonstration?
Wrong Foucault, but -5 points for trying.
Daniel J.
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
LGTrotter wrote:
I'll see your Derrida and raise you a Foucault. Go on, you know you want to...
The pendulum swings first one way and then the other while the world rotates underneath it. There is a fine example I. The science museum, if I remember my youth accurately.
We had one in the Physics/Engineering building at university. An interesting device. Was the Foucault you intended as interesting, and if so, why?
LGTrotter wrote:
I'll see your Derrida and raise you a Foucault. Go on, you know you want to...
The pendulum swings first one way and then the other while the world rotates underneath it. There is a fine example I. The science museum, if I remember my youth accurately.
We had one in the Physics/Engineering building at university. An interesting device. Was the Foucault you intended as interesting, and if so, why?
Define 'as interesting'.
Daniel J.
Husband of a relentless former Soviet Chess Master.
delete.. delete.. *sigh*.. delete...
LGTrotter wrote:
I'll see your Derrida and raise you a Foucault. Go on, you know you want to...
The pendulum swings first one way and then the other while the world rotates underneath it. There is a fine example I. The science museum, if I remember my youth accurately.
We had one in the Physics/Engineering building at university. An interesting device. Was the Foucault you intended as interesting, and if so, why?
I would refer you to the course reading list, 'Madness and civilisation' and 'Discipline and punish', particularly the first title, and the chapter on the ship of fools may prove useful in understanding the forum, the second title we will consider in the specialist theme of 'Apostrophe Crimes' in the second semester.
djewesbury wrote:I thought we'd agreed that this forum would be conducted in English. This is the last warning - any more of this and I'm bringing in the poststructuralists. Then you'll be sorry.
I'll see your Derrida and raise you a Foucault. Go on, you know you want to...
The pendulum swings first one way and then the other while the world rotates underneath it. There is a fine example I. The science museum, if I remember my youth accurately.
Also in the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles; and is there still anything in the Panthéon, or was that just the site of the initial demonstration?
Wrong Foucault, but -5 points for trying.
Well that's what I get for trying to lighten the mood and make meaningless drivel something more entertaining than Poets Corner. I shall go off in a huff and listen to the cricket.
Oh heck. No I won't. What shall I do instead which is more entertaining than meaningless drivel ... Aha! I shall catch up on back episodes of Tweet of the Day.
Top Ports in 2024: Niepoort 1900 Colheita, b.1971. A near perfect Port.
2025: Quevedo 1972 Colheita, b.2024. Just as good as Niepoort 1900!