[OS X TeX] Re: [OS X TeX]
Michael Kubovy
kubovy at virginia.edu
Tue Dec 12 02:11:10 CET 2006
On Dec 11, 2006, at 11:10 AM, Victor Ivrii wrote:
> On 12/11/06, Themis Matsoukas <matsoukas at psu.edu> wrote:
>
>> On Dec 11, 2006, at 9:33 AM, Christopher Menzel wrote:
>>
>>> > A: Because it interrupts the natural flow of a conversation.
>>> >
>>> > Q: Why should one avoid top-posting?
>>> >
>>> > :-)
>>
>> I always took exception with the logic of this pop argument --not
>> with the principle of top posting itself, but with the specific
>> argument that is used to justify it: if the human brain can resolve
>> the inverted A/Q puzzle so easily, the "unnatural" flow of
>> conversation (from A to Q) is no impediment to communication.
>
> I suspect that it is actually a test: if the poster cannot learn not
> to top-post then probably the reader who can read the unnatural flow
> should not bother to read since he/she is probably more smarter than
> the poster :-).
>
> More seriously, question proceeds the answer. Sure one can read in any
> random order but it requires a bit more efforts and time and the
> poster should try to spare the readers time rather than his/her own
> since there are many readers of each post but just one poster.
I have yet to see decisive arguments for bottom-posting. The
following should not be construed as an attempt to provide a decisive
argument in favor of top posting; but it is an argument against
bottom-posting.
If one is following a thread, one might have in mind the preceding
messages in the conversation. In such a case the repetition of the
previous message(s) at the top --- especially in the fourth message
in a thread --- could conceivably be inefficient for the reader. One
might think of a top-posted message as one that puts the news first
and provides a reminder of the conversation as a sequence of nested
footnotes, as it were. A conscientious top poster might consider
starting his/her post by summarizing the argument so far, or at least
use an introductory topic sentence, and perhaps consider avoiding
indexical references to previous posts (e.g., "this argument" rather
than "the argument that ... ").
_____________________________
Professor Michael Kubovy
University of Virginia
Department of Psychology
USPS: P.O.Box 400400 Charlottesville, VA 22904-4400
Parcels: Room 102 Gilmer Hall
McCormick Road Charlottesville, VA 22903
Office: B011 +1-434-982-4729
Lab: B019 +1-434-982-4751
Fax: +1-434-982-4766
WWW: http://www.people.virginia.edu/~mk9y/
------------------------- Helpful Info -------------------------
Mac-TeX Website: http://www.esm.psu.edu/mac-tex/
TeX FAQ: http://www.tex.ac.uk/faq
List Archive: http://tug.org/pipermail/macostex-archives/
List Reminders & Etiquette: http://www.esm.psu.edu/mac-tex/list/
More information about the macostex-archives
mailing list