Read Surfaces and Essences: Analogy as the Fuel and Fire of Thinking Online
Authors: Douglas Hofstadter,Emmanuel Sander
Homo sapiens sapiens
versus
computers,
24–25
homosexual marriage
, impact on concept of
marriage
,
53
hub
concept: as broadened from
wheel center
to
central airport
,
76
,
84
; internal structure of,
51–54
; picture of,
51
human minds
versus
computers,
24–25
humor, in Copycat domain,
358
,
360
,
366
hump
, evolution of the concept in a child’s mind,
198–200
Hunting Mister Heartbreak
(Raban),
284
Hurricane Helene/lady-with-suitcase analogy,
284–286
Hussein/Hitler analogy,
135
hybrid phrases,
see
lexical blends
hyphenated, spaced, and welded compound words,
88
—I—
i
(square root of –1),
445
; generalized,
448
“I am like you” analogy, pervasiveness of,
156
Icelandic reminding episode,
181–182
idea choice, constrained by conversation,
26
ideal gas: defined,
457
; energy spectrum of,
457
,
458
ideal gas/black body
analogy: found by Wilhelm Wien,
458
; refound by Einstein,
457–459
,
463
ideal gas/Brownian motion
analogy,
458
ideal gas/pool table
explanatory analogy,
135
,
457–458
identity: confusion of two people’s,
224–225
; intrinsic and permanent,
190
,
435
idiomatic phrases in American English, list of,
95
idioms: in language A with no counterpart in language B,
119–121
; meaning not deducible from constituent words,
96–98
iggfruders
versus
snuoiqers,
11
ignoring the surface level of word problems, difficulty of,
427–428
illusion: that category labels are mechanically retrieved,
450
,
513–514
; that category labels are objective,
522–526
; that category labels are precise,
59–61
; that category labels are unique,
58
,
190
,
192
,
465–466
; that category membership is black-and-white,
14
; that concepts provided by one’s native language are monolithic,
82–83
; that one’s native-language categories cut nature at the joints,
14
image-based search process,
172
imaginary numbers, gradual acceptance of,
442–443
“I’m going to pay for my beer” me-too analogy,
143–144
immaterial objects, interacting with,
252–253
impasse: caused by overhasty categorization,
258
; escape from,
248–252
,
255–256
,
292–292
; pinpointing the source of, as crucial in creativity,
256
impoverishment: of overly abstracted concepts,
107–108
,
166
,
204
; possible utility of,
250
“in”: broken into two concepts by the French language,
78
,
80
; used zeugmatically,
6
,
7–8
incoherent analogies in Copycat and in real life,
357–358
;
see also
dizziness
index fnger/fourth finger
analogy,
464
Indianapolis hospital/Verona hospital analogy,
312
indignation, as frequent cause of caricature analogies,
317
,
321
individuals, categories centered on,
221–227
Indonesian language, concept of
sibling
in,
77
induced structure,
345
induction: as extrapolation via analogy from the past,
307–310
; parameters affecting credibility of,
308
inferences: effects of typicality on,
390–391
; fallacious, due to frame-blending,
361
; flowing from naïve analogies,
386
; mediated by categorization,
20–21
,
225
,
278
infinite-dimensional spaces,
444
inner world of expectations as defining certain categories,
68
insight: incoherently mixed with literal-mindedness,
358
; quartet of, found successively and exploited together,
357
; thanks to caricature analogies,
326–330
in
-situations, subtlety of,
7–8
instant pinpointing of timeless essences,
173–174
intelligence: and analogy-making,
126
; as a function of the number of concepts one has,
128
; list of various definitions of,
125
; nature of,
124–126
; as the pinpointing of essence,
125–126
,
128–131
; possibly rising steadily over time,
130
; tests, as the prime venue of analogy-making,
16
intelligent ignoring and forgetfulness,
426–427
intension
versus
extension of a category,
55
,
244
intensity of emotion as a function of strength of analogical
mapping onto another person,
155
interfaces, profiting from naïve analogies,
400
interjections as categories,
46
interplanetary bumblebee,
see
buzzing interplanetary bumblebee
intuition, alleged irrationality of,
392
,
501
“
in
vite”/”
ac
cept” caricature analogy,
319
,
380
IQ scores and IQ tests,
see
intelligence
irony, as key in encoding of
Danny at the Grand Canyon
,
161
irresistible analogies,
104
,
155
,
157
,
297
,
305–313
irresistible force meeting immovable object
category,
326
Isis,
38
isomorphic word problems perceived differently,
429–434
Italian language: compound words in,
89
; greetings in,
45–46
; names of pasta types in,
243–244
; zeugmas in,
8
,
11
italics as a convention for concepts,
34
,
110
—J—
jargon, made mostly of everyday words,
394–400
javelin caricature of coffee-stirring sticks,
317
,
321–322
Jeanine/Ruth analogical conflation,
225
Jeff, pluralization of,
223
Jewish mother
category,
93–94
jiggles, ripples, rumbles, tumbles,
475
Joane (who said “Come on!”),
39
,
41
,
42
job decision: as frame-blend example,
367
; reached via analogy,
331
Johnson, Mark,
63
Jourdain, Monsieur,
186
juggling, novices’ lack of skill in,
340
Jupiter,
15
; moons of, spotted by Galileo,
43–45
—K—
Kałuża, Henryk,
76
Kant, Immanuel,
21
“Karnak Caps” (Kellie Gutman),
160
,
380–381
Karnak, Temple of,
see
Dick at Karnak
Katy, as spokesperson for the centrality of categorization,
503–529
; mapping herself and fiancé onto couple being married,
514
; poofing into thin air,
529
;
see also
Anna
,
Katyanna
Katyanna,
see
Hofsander
,
Katyanna
Kepler, Johannes,
471
,
500
; of etymology, the,
222
keys, concrete
versus
abstract,
255
,
295
Keysar, Boaz,
228
Kheops, tiny statue of, as giant attraction,
162
Khong, Yuen Foong,
332–337
killing two birds with one pronominal stone,
148
kinetic energy: formula for,
470–471
; lost by flashlight,
470–471
“Kleenex”
versus
“kleenex”,
217–218
,
232
knee/elbow
analogy,
463–465
Knie, Knut von,
463–465
knife, falling, as highly abstract concept,
28–29
“knight” “jumping” on top of “castle”,
366
knots,
N
-dimensional and prime,
449
known: chimera of freeing oneself from the,
313–315
; as constraint biasing perception,
314
; our intimate, ceaseless dependence on
313–315
Korean translators, compared to European translators,
306–307
Krishnamurti, Jiddu,
313
—L—
labels, linguistic, and categories,
14
,
33–34
,
39–43
,
45–49
,
61–65
,
66–68
,
70–84
,
85–89
,
93–104
,
106–124
,
126–127
,
132–133
laboratory in space: pulled by rocket,
491–492
,
495–496
; released by angel,
493–494
lacunæ in a given language,
12
,
81–83
,
119–122
,
132–133
La Fontaine, Jean de,
112
,
113
; naïve analogy by,
388
Lagrange, Joseph Louis de,
445–446
,
453
Lakoff, George,
63
language
, as an imprecise category,
61
language lacking words for vivid feelings,
133
;
see also
lacunæ
languages spoken, blurriness of number of,
61
Laplace, Pierre Simon de,
453
,
480
latent analogies due to semantic halos,
271
,
273
,
274
legalese, uselessness of, in communication,
144
,
149
,
329–330
,
354
Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm von,
443
“lemon”, opacity to a French speaker,
232
Lenni (who said “Gotta nurse the truck!”),
39
,
42
,
43
,
45
; compared with Galileo,
45
Leonardo da Vinci,
351
; of ice cream, the,
222
letting the cat out of the bag
as a category,
96–97
Lewis, Gilbert, coining of the word “photon” by,
462
lexical blends,
259–270
; list of,
260
; multiple sources of,
263–266
; phrases contributing to,
263–270
; rampancy of,
261
; in a single word,
266–267
life, as perceived through a Pac-Man filter,
303–305
life/voyage
analogy,
511
light: bending in gravitational field of the sun,
496
; as corpuscles,
459
,
461–462
; Doppler effect for,
469–471
; as electromagnetic waves,
212–213
,
455
,
459
,
461
; following curved pathway in lab,
496
; generalized to all energy,
473
,
474
; mass of,
472
,
483
; as massless,
472
light quantum: Einstein’s analogical pathway to,
455–459
; named “photon” by G. Lewis,
459
,
462
; scorned by Einstein’s peers,
460–463
; today’s physicists not knowing the story of,
462
light waves/sound waves
analogy,
211–213
,
361
,
470
; see also
sound particles/light particles
analogy
Liljenquist, Katie,
289