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Hi Folks, The mathematician Alfred North Whitehead writes [1]: > One very important property of symbolism to possess > is that it should be concise, so as to be visible at one > glance of the eye and to be rapidly written. > ... by the aid of symbolism, we can make transitions in > reasoning almost mechanically by the eye, which > otherwise would call into play the higher facilities of > the brain. > It is a profoundly erroneous truism, repeated by all > copy-books and by eminent people when they are > making speeches, that we should cultivate the > habit of thinking what we are doing. The precise > opposite is the case. Civilization advances by > extending the number of important operations > which we can perform without thinking about > them. Operations of thought are like cavalry > charges in a battle--they are strictly limited in > number, they require fresh horses, and must > only be made at decisive moments. The XML specification says "terseness is of minimal importance." That is the opposite of what Whitehead says. In fact, terseness is of *maximal* importance, yes? Perhaps this explains why data formats such as JSON have been so successful--they are terse. Thoughts? /Roger [1] An Introduction to Mathematics by Alfred North Whitehead, p. 41-42.
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