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Date: | Thu, 17 Jan 2002 20:41:47 -0500 |
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Hal,
Every once in a while, I see subtle hints that some think only scholars,
with degrees absolute, should count as authority. When I was a very young
grad student, I went to the first Mark Twain Circle meeting in New Orleans
and gushed over Justin Kaplan's book. One of the august, who shall remain
nameless, responded, "Oh he's just a biographer. He's not a scholar." I
have a Harlen Ellison record on which he excoriates a MIT audience who booed
the name of Carl Sagan. For them Sagan was just a popularizer of science,
and Ellison thought this was great. "He's a nifty guy," Ellison said,
"providing a real service for folks who aren't coming to MIT."
We scholars are an interesting breed. I remember a newspaper account on a
humor conference in which the reporter was startled that, during the run of
the conference, no one laughed. The seminars were detailed, foot-noted, and
eminently publishable. But no one laughed. So why call it humor?
I wonder if God created scholars because he was disappointed in
administrators.
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