Business Daily from THE HINDU group of publications Monday, May 14, 2007 ePaper |
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Mentor
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Books Columns - Reading Room Imaginary lines
After Columbus's return from his first Atlantic crossing, there was `a tremendous jurisdictional dispute over newly discovered lands' between Spain and Portugal, `the two most powerful maritime rivals in Europe'. Thus narrates Neil Armstrong in his foreword to Longitude by Dava Sobel (www.oxfordbookstore.com). The dispute was settled when Pope Alexander VI `drew a meridian line from north to south on a chart of the great ocean, one hundred leagues west of the Azores'. All lands west of the line, discovered or undiscovered, were assigned to Spain, and all lands to the east, to Portugal. "It was masterful diplomacy, particularly when no one knew where the line fell." Longitude problem was the thorniest in the eighteenth century, writes Sobel. "Lacking the ability to measure longitude, sailors throughout the great ages of exploration had been literally lost at sea." A book that would introduce you to the hero, John Harrison, a self-taught clockmaker, who solved the problem.
Football fancies
Football started off in India `as a marker of unitary social identity and progressed as an emblem of nationalism', write Boria Majumdar and Kausik Bandyopadhyay in Goalless: The story of a unique footballing nation. India may rank 140 in the FIFA (Fédération Internationale de Football Association) ratings, yet `Indian football ranks high in terms of its culture, tradition and mass following,' note the authors. "What it requires to `take off' is proper direction." Will football succeed in usurping the `mass obsession' repute from cricket?
More than mistakes
Are you aware that the popular saying, `A little knowledge is a dangerous thing,' is in fact a misquotation? It is an alteration of the `A little learning is a dangerous thing,' a line in `An Essay on Criticism' (1711) by Alexander Pope, informs What They Didn't Say, edited by Elizabeth Knowles. "The first use of `knowledge' rather than `learning' is found in the late 19th century, as in the following comment by the biologist Thomas Henry Huxley: `If a little knowledge is dangerous, where is the man who has so much as to be out of danger?'" Misquotations are much more than mistakes, says the intro. "From deliberate reworkings to unconscious changes, they show quotations on the move in our language." Some verbal slips can have a lasting impact, notes the intro. "`Facts are stupid things' (for `Facts are stubborn things' by John Adams) was a momentary error of Ronald Reagan's, instantly corrected, but it is still widely quoted and remembered." Let not the book be what you didn't read! Tailpiece "All was well till the company organised a motivation drive." "What happened, as a result?" "Entertainment expenses have soared, even as productivity keeps falling."
D. Murali
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