338 lines
12 KiB
Groff
338 lines
12 KiB
Groff
From: jch@computer-lab.cambridge.ac.uk
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Newsgroups: rec.humor.funny
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Subject: More Cambridge Quotes
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Date: 15 Jul 90 23:30:08 GMT
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1988
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(contd..)
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and another one from a 1A Engineering maths lecture :
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"Graphs of higher degree polynomials have this habit of doing unwanted
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wiggly things."
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It is said of some things in maths that a mathematician should read the
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proofs precisely once.
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"I don't want to go into this in detail, but I would like to illustrate some
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of the tedium."
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From a _single_ seminar at the King's College Research Centre:
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"I'm sure it's right whether it's valid or not."
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"Damn the torpedoes. Full speed ahead."
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"I can see T is tending to infinity for you as well."
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"If I am incomprehensible then stop me, but if it's simply wrong then I don't
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think that it matters."
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From a supervisor:
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"It's a standard question, made a bit harder by adding some A-level stuff."
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An introduction to the summation convention:
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"If you've got a problem with this then go back, write the whole thing out
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using sigma notation and convince yourself that it's better not to have
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problems."
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And from the University of Bath...
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"A one by one matrix has one column and one row, and the same number
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in both. "
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"Using some hand-waving and symmetry ideas... "
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"You haven't written it in green - your notes will be wrong. "
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"Any Questions? [pause] You all look asleep - what is it,
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hyperglucocemia? Too much sugar on your cornflakes? Not any
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cornflakes? Never mind - I'm bright eyed and bushy tailed, so let's
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continue."
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Meanwhile, back in Cambridge...
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"This is known as the 'Toytown solution'. Actually, there is a more
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technical term for it ..."
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And from the DPMMS common room...
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"Of course this is true for more general values of 5"
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"Not so much a double coset table, more a pile of junk"
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A brief conversation -
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"What have we not got?"
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"No we have not"
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"No we don't"
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"We have not got not"
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"Ah, Not is what we have not got!"
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-Agreement followed.
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....what do they put in the coffee??
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From an applied maths supervisor (a part III student):
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"All numbers are totally irrelevant, unless you're doing Astrophysics."
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"However well you do [in your Tripos exams] you always find there's someone
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from Trinity who's beaten you."
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I'm told that countability isn't taught in IA anymore. It doesn't seem to have
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been taught to this Part III lecturer at all!
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"Damn! I'm running out of integers!"
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******************************************************************************
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1989:
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Anonymous supervisor, talking about Relativistic Electrodynamics:
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"There are some bits at the end of the course I don't really
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understand, but the students don't normally get that far."
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From an EIST lecturer:
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"When you stick your fingers in the mains, its not the imaginary component
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which you will feel"
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From substitute lecturer, replacing the scheduled appearance by Dr. X:
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"Good morning. For those of you who don't know me, I am not Dr. X;
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I am Dr. X's representative on Earth."
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And from my source in Bath...
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"Now, I want you to look very carefully at what we have just proved.
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What we have just proved is false." [slight pause while what he has
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just said sinks in] "Oh dear, that's going to go onto the computer,
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isn't it."
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[ Fame at last ! ]
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"I'll give you a clue - it begins with `f' and rhymes with `factor'..."
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- Lecturer to a 1st year problem class
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"The object of this lecture is to frighten half of you away."
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"I wrote my first program in 1954, and that didn't work either."
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"That is the total and absolute generalisation ... well, almost."
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Back in Cambridge, explanations are up to their usual standards...
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"Perhaps it would be best if this argument remained a deep mystery to you."
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"One property which we know very well happens; a+b=b+c."
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(for all a,b,c?)
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"I shall explain this by waving my hands about in an appropriate manner."
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"What I've talked about today seems to be uniquely incoherent ...
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I never know if you're as baffled as me, or if you're getting along fine."
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And our first candidate for the Sybil Fawlty prize for "Stating the Bleeding
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Obvious":
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"g inverse is called an inverse to g."
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"This is not really a convention, it's just the normal way of doing things."
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The things Cambridge does to a lecturer...
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"Dr. X hasn't lectured a Cambridge group before, so he might be quite
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interesting."
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"Some students may feel that the contents of Question 33 are both dull and
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useless. I must confess that my first impulse is to reply that it serves them
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right for doing the fast course."
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From the wonderful world of IA Natsci:
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"Whenever the maths turns out to be impossible, you have to invent new
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physics."
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A depressed first year...
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"I used to be without hope - but now various people have assured me
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that failing the exams is more difficult than Green's functions."
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"There are ways of managing without cuts, but I do not think the present
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Government is going to find them" - IB Complex variable, October 1979.
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"I've never tried dividing both sides by infinity before, so here goes."
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"It's OK to divide by zero, provided you don't cancel it."
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"It's a _real_ integer, not just any old integer."
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For once a quote meant to be humourous:
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"To a mathematician, PI is 1 and PI^2 is 10. 2*PI we're not quite sure about."
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Descriptions of assorted mathematicians:
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"He's not just an experimentalist. He's an antitheorist!"
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"He gets lost on random walks."
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"Some inspired joker - probably Maxwell."
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"This is the simple form. [pause] Well, it's simple in the sense that it leaves
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out all the really important bits."
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"...as Poincare' proved at the beginning of this talk..."
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"This is obvious. But don't look at it too carefully, or it becomes unobvious,
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until you look at it for a long time when it becomes obvious again."
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"I need two hands to wave, not just one."
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"FORTRAN... Then, as now, the language used by scientists with real problems."
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"Suitably interpreted, this is an exact value."
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And from the depths of historical apocrypha...
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Supervisor (drawing a graph): "This function has no nodes."
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(Pause)
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"How does it smell?"
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A good enough philosophy of life:
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"Theoretical physicists tend to assume that Nature isn't as malevolent as
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our pure mathematical examiners."
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The following shouldn't really be here but I couldn't resist it:
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Tourist outside DAMTP: "I think it used to be a church."
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"Bear with me until my starting transient has settled down into doing things
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properly from the notes."
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"And now, a few examples of fatigue from [my] vast experience."
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Do we have a Dr. Hobson in the faculty?
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"If there is a choice, you've got to do it."
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"Different may mean the same."
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Picture this...
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"A sphere isn't that simple when you get into higher dimensions
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- it's a bit non-flat."
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And those fascinating results come thick and fast in this course:
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"There are 9 results in there - it looks like it's going to be tedious, and
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indeed it is."
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Sometimes I think they make Quantum Mechanics deliberately obscure...
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"There's a number down here which, for the sake of argument, we can
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call 1."
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Precision? What precision?
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"We have a correspondence that's nearly one-to-one."
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And a couple of remarks from the students...
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"Mathmos think of engineers a bit like lemmings...
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...they're both wooly and jump to the wrong conclusions."
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"I don't see the point of lecturers talking, except to resolve some of the
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ambiguities in their handwriting."
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"Various people with suicidal tendencies can even integrate elliptic functions"
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Said of Algebra III:
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"This course could be viewed as 1001 things to do with your favourite matrix"
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The problems that the maths societies have to overcome to get their audience!
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"Why weren't you at the meeting?"
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"Because it was boring."
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"No it wasn't."
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"Well, it _should_ have been!"
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Oh, the joys of dual lecturing!
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"I was going to say 'the cream of the nation's youth', but they're probably at
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the other lecturer."
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The secret of Pure Mathematics:
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"...interpreting out of all recognition..."
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The black art of applied mathematics...
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"It is traditional to leave the notation ambiguous."
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....and talking about the black arts...
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"For non-deterministic read 'Inhabited by pixies'."
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And if that wasn't confusing enough...
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"I thought I understood Newton's Third Law before that lecture."
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"This is equation 2, which implies that equation 3 comes someplace earlier."
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"Unless x is a banana or some other such object that commutes with A."
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And this year's honesty award must surely go for the following two gems from
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the same lecturer...
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"I'm going to make a small point in the corner of the board [does so], and come
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back to it later!"
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And later...
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"The thing which caused me to write 'lies' in extremely small letters in the
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corner of the board was..."
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And later still...
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"When you see this, you are entitled to go ` Y'what?! '."
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A possible candidate for the Tautology Award?
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"If we want to take the westerly winds into account, we could also do that
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using this method, but then we'd have to take the westerly winds into
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account."
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"This type of rotor is known as a squirrel-cage rotor because the way it's
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wound looks like a bird cage."
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CompSci meets Zoology?
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"What we're trying to do is work things out about elephants."
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******************************************************************************
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1990:
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A nomination for the Sybil Fawlty "Stating the Bleedin' Obvious" Prize:
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"A polynomial f is said to have degree m, written deg f equals m, if it does
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have degree m."
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Now it is fairly well known that lectures are not supposed to be copied down
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mindlessly. But...
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"Recall word 2 of defn 2.1"
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But then again...
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"I know you all have very innocent minds, but occasionally a word should be
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allowed to wander through before reaching the paper."
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And on the subject of teaching styles:
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"Proof left as an exercise for your supervisor."
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And this year's first contenders for the Tautology award:
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"It's obvious that what I've just written down is obvious."
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"The fixed element can be said to be exactly what it is."
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Mathematical notation is a minefield of obscure symbols ranging over most
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alphabets and scriptstyles. Any guesses for which character was described by an
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undergraduate as:
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"It's a script spider"?
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And with the reading problems come the corresponding writing ones suffered by
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these lecturers:
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"My script 'y's always end up looking like rabbits."
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"Little mouse tensored with piece of cheese."
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However, good notation has its rewards as described by this lecturer:
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"The prime leaps on to the other factor in a most convenient fashion."
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And now, back to the content of the lecture courses:
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"You can hardly underestimate the importance of this."
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"I've got a lot to say about this theorem, so don't stop me if I go too fast."
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"Sometimes it's useful to know how large your zero is"
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Three from the same lecturer who is clearly having real problems...
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"What am I doing? I haven't written any damn thing yet - I've just written
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total rubbish."
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"What am I talking about? Does anyone know what I'm talking about? This
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is rubbish."
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"Every time I go to the board with these notes I write down something completely
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different."
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Hmmm... do I detect someone almost as cynical as myself?
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"Theoretical physicist - a physicist whose existence is postulated, to make the
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numbers balance, but who is never actually observed in the laboratory."
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A IB Chemistry lecturer, refering to a previously derived equation.
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"This is rigorous. Well, it's rigorous in the sense that ... All right,
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it's not rigorous."
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Certain calulations will always be CPU intensive...
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"This principle is sometimes known as assuming the CIA is paying our computing
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bills."
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Letter from an editor:
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"I very much regret to inform you that the review procedure of your paper
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'Approximation of Delay systems by Fourier-Laguerre series', is incurring a
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delay..."
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The end (as of 5th July 1990).
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