fortune index all fortunes
| #3461 | | "As I was walking among the fires of Hell, delighted with the enjoyments of Genius; which to Angels look like torment and insanity. I collected some of their Proverbs..." - Blake, "The Marriage of Heaven and Hell"
| | #3462 | | HOW TO PROVE IT, PART 1
proof by example: The author gives only the case n = 2 and suggests that it contains most of the ideas of the general proof.
proof by intimidation: 'Trivial'.
proof by vigorous handwaving: Works well in a classroom or seminar setting.
| | #3463 | | HOW TO PROVE IT, PART 2
proof by cumbersome notation: Best done with access to at least four alphabets and special symbols.
proof by exhaustion: An issue or two of a journal devoted to your proof is useful.
proof by omission: 'The reader may easily supply the details' 'The other 253 cases are analogous' '...'
| | #3464 | | HOW TO PROVE IT, PART 3
proof by obfuscation: A long plotless sequence of true and/or meaningless syntactically related statements.
proof by wishful citation: The author cites the negation, converse, or generalization of a theorem from the literature to support his claims.
proof by funding: How could three different government agencies be wrong?
proof by eminent authority: 'I saw Karp in the elevator and he said it was probably NP- complete.'
| | #3465 | | HOW TO PROVE IT, PART 4
proof by personal communication: 'Eight-dimensional colored cycle stripping is NP-complete [Karp, personal communication].'
proof by reduction to the wrong problem: 'To see that infinite-dimensional colored cycle stripping is decidable, we reduce it to the halting problem.'
proof by reference to inaccessible literature: The author cites a simple corollary of a theorem to be found in a privately circulated memoir of the Slovenian Philological Society, 1883.
proof by importance: A large body of useful consequences all follow from the proposition in question.
| | #3466 | | HOW TO PROVE IT, PART 5
proof by accumulated evidence: Long and diligent search has not revealed a counterexample.
proof by cosmology: The negation of the proposition is unimaginable or meaningless. Popular for proofs of the existence of God.
proof by mutual reference: In reference A, Theorem 5 is said to follow from Theorem 3 in reference B, which is shown to follow from Corollary 6.2 in reference C, which is an easy consequence of Theorem 5 in reference A.
proof by metaproof: A method is given to construct the desired proof. The correctness of the method is proved by any of these techniques.
| | #3467 | | HOW TO PROVE IT, PART 6
proof by picture: A more convincing form of proof by example. Combines well with proof by omission.
proof by vehement assertion: It is useful to have some kind of authority relation to the audience.
proof by ghost reference: Nothing even remotely resembling the cited theorem appears in the reference given.
| | #3468 | | HOW TO PROVE IT, PART 7 proof by forward reference: Reference is usually to a forthcoming paper of the author, which is often not as forthcoming as at first.
proof by semantic shift: Some of the standard but inconvenient definitions are changed for the statement of the result.
proof by appeal to intuition: Cloud-shaped drawings frequently help here.
| | #3469 | | [May one] doubt whether, in cheese and timber, worms are generated, or, if beetles and wasps, in cow-dung, or if butterflies, locusts, shellfish, snails, eels, and such life be procreated of putrefied matter, which is to receive the form of that creature to which it is by formative power disposed[?] To question this is to question reason, sense, and experience. If he doubts this, let him go to Egypt, and there he will find the fields swarming with mice begot of the mud of the Nylus, to the great calamity of the inhabitants. A seventeenth century opinion quoted by L. L. Woodruff, in *The Evolution of Earth and Man*, 1929
| | #3470 | | Seen on a button at an SF Convention: Veteran of the Bermuda Triangle Expeditionary Force. 1990-1951.
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