Editing 2518: Lumpers and Splitters
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==Explanation== | ==Explanation== | ||
− | It is common to | + | {{incomplete|Created by a FAT CATEGORIZATION META-PEDANT NAMED ANNA- Please change this comment when editing this page. Do NOT delete this tag too soon.}} |
+ | It is common to categorize groups of people into certain categories. "Lumpers" group what might at first seem to be many distinct things into a small number of categories, while "Splitters" do the opposite: split what seems to be a cohesive group of things into many smaller categories. | ||
− | The comic | + | The comic labels [[Megan]] and [[Cueball]] as those two types of categorizers. [[Megan]], the lumper, describes herself and [[Cueball]] as as both being "categorization pedants", lumping the two distinct categories "lumpers" and "splitters" into one. [[Cueball]], the splitter, subcategorizes [[Megan]] into a more specific type of lumper: a "meta-lumper", since the things Megan was lumping includes lumpers themselves. If [[Cueball]] further categorized himself he would be a meta-splitter. |
− | The title text references the opening line of the novel '' | + | The title text references the opening line of the novel ''Anna Karenina'' by Leo Tolstoy which reads (as translated into English), “Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.” Randall is drawing a parallel between this line and the lumper/splitter distinction because the line lumps one group of things together (happy families) while splitting another group (unhappy families) |
− | + | Most people (especially the children) are happy when their family is lumped together as opposes to when it is split apart (divorce). | |
==Transcript== | ==Transcript== | ||
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[[Category:Language]] | [[Category:Language]] | ||
[[Category:Fiction]] <!--Title text ref of book--> | [[Category:Fiction]] <!--Title text ref of book--> | ||
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