> Santo,
> 
> Santo Wrote:
> >Do memes usually come in pairs of apparent opposites?  Or am I just
> fooling myself with
> >semantics?  (In that it is hard linguistically to have a symbol for "X"
> >without, by labeling it so, creating the concept of everything else
> >being "not X".)  I seem to recall that set theory deals with this at
> >length...
> 
> I'm not sure Set Theory is up to the task of describing memes and their
> interactions.  Using 
> only Logic and Set Theory, Bertrand Russel proved the moon is made of green
> cheese.
> 
> Cohesive Math works a little better.  Given X, we assign it to 1.  The
> opposite of X is -1, 
> which is only one thing, rather than an infinite number of things.
The above is sarcasm, right?
Unless Bertrand Russell's math dated from after now [1996], he didn't 
have a way to to translate both of the natural-english terms "moon" and 
"Green cheese" into a form which would allow such manipulation to be 
translated back into that sentence.
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/   Towards the conversion of data into information....
/
/   Kenneth Boyd
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