On 05/13/2010 09:36 AM, Jussi-Ville Heiskanen wrote: > During the > Golden Age of Islam it was much more eclectic and > permissively pluralistic than the Christian or Jewish > cultures of the time [...]
Which reminds me of another interesting historical tidbit. I was rummaging for story about Samuel Johnson and people hunting for naughty words in his dictionary, when I came across a Google Books reproduction of an 1896 periodical titled "The Homiletic Review", edited by I.K. Funk, of Funk and Wagnalls. It appears that a competitor to their dictionary culled the naughtiest bits from the Funk & Wagnalls Standard Dictionary, used those to claim they were filth-mongers, and set out to create a giant hullabaloo. What I quote below is a spirited defense of recording all the words as they are used. In the original, it's followed by a page of quotes from "scholars, teachers, and editors" applauding a neutral, uncensored reference work. It's funny to see how little has changed. A VILE ATTACK ON THE STANDARD DICTIONARY. A grave wrong is being perpetrated by a reprinter of one of the English competitors of the Funk & Wagnalls Standard Dictionary, assisted by some unscrupulous agents of other dictionaries—a wrong that cannot be excused by the exigencies of commercial rivalry. As is well known, in all unabridged dictionaries it is necessary to give the definitions of certain indelicate words. Eighteen of these words (selected out of a vocabulary of over 300,000 terms in the Standard) have been collected and printed with their definitions by the reprinter of this English dictionary, and circulars containing them are being distributed among teachers, school trustees, and parents all through this country, stirring up a filthy agitation that will end, unless frowned down by the public press and other leaders of public opinion, in setting people of prurient minds and children everywhere to searching dictionaries for this class of words. One of these publications contains such outrageously unjust comments as the following: "About two years ago the publishing house of Funk & Wagnalls brought into the world a monstrosity entitled the Standard Dictionary of the English Language." "So far as relates to its collection of obscene, filthy, blasphemous, slang, and profane words. It has no counterpart in dictionaries of the English Language." It is but fair to the press and scholars of England to say that the English critics have in no way seconded this unfair assault, but are unanimous in the most unqualified endorsement of the American work, the standard Dictionary, expressing in many ways the same opinion as that of the St. James's Budget [weekly edition of the St. James's Gazette] London, which said: " To say that it is perfect in form and scope is not extravagance of praise, and to say that it is the most valuable Dictionary of the English language is but to Repeat the obvious. The Standard Dictionary should be the pride of literary America as it Is the admiration of literary England." The insincerity of this attack on the Standard is seen in the fact that nearly every one of these 18 words is in the English work published by this reprinter, and it contains other words so grossly indelicate and withal so rarely used as to have been excluded from the Standard and from nearly all the other dictionaries. Fifteen out of the eighteen words (and others of the came class) are, and properly so, in the Century Dictionary, and they are to be found, with scarcely an exception, in every other reputable unabridged dictionary, and this class of words is invariably recorded in the leading dictionaries of all languages. Since this attack was made, we have submitted to Charles A. Dana and to a number of well-known educators the question whether we committed an error in admitting into the Standard, as have other dictionaries, this class of words. The answer has been without an exception, "You did not." The fact is, extraordinary care was used by the editors of the Standard "to protect the language." Of the more than 500,000 words collected by the hundreds of readers employed to search all books of merit from Chaucer's time to the present, over /300,000 were excluded wholly from the vocabulary/; hence there was no need to pad the vocabulary. The rules of exclusion and inclusion were most carefully made and rigidly enforced. A most perplexing problem from beginning to end was how to reduce the vocabulary, not how to enlarge it. Compression was carried by many devices to the extremest degree. The editors who passed upon the admission of words numbered over one hundred of the best known writers and scholars In America and England. To accuse such men of "filthiness" is to do a wrong of the gravest degree. It is the business of a dictionary to record words, not to create, nor to destroy them; to answer inquirers concerning the spelling, pronunciation, and meaning of all words that are used to any considerable extent, not to omit those it does not fancy. Whether a word has a right to exist or not, the final arbiter is the people, not the dictionary. The dictionary, as says Trench, should be the inventory of the language, and, as says the Encyclopedia Britannica under the term DICTIONARY, it "should include all of the words of the language. ... A complete and Standard Dictionary should make no choice. Words obsolete and newly coined, barbarous, vulgar, and affected, temporary, provincial, and local, belonging to peculiar classes, professions, pursuits, and trades, should all find their place,—the only question being as to the evidence of their existence,—not indeed, all received with equal honor and regard, but with their characteristics and defects duly noted and pointed out." Improper or indelicate words, when it was necessary to admit them into the Standard, were blacklisted as /low, vulgar, slang/, and printed in small type. It did not seem to the editors that an unabridged dictionary could go further without justly incurring blame. To collect from such a work words of the class referred to and publish them is as great an outrage as to collect from the Bible the many indelicate words and passages to be found there, or those from Shakespeare (some of these 18 words arc found both in the Bible and Shakespeare), and then to print and scatter abroad the collection, saying: " See what a foul book is the Bible; see what an obscene and blasphemous work is Shakespeare." The publication and distribution of these circulars is a gross assault on public decency. An agent who attempts to exhibit such a printed circular should not be listened to; he Is a public enemy, and should be turned from every decent door. The old story will be remembered of a woman accosting Samuel Johnson, shortly after his dictionary had been published, with, "Doctor Johnson, I am so sorry that you put in your dictionary the naughty words." " Madam," retorted the doctor, " I am sorry that you have been looking for them." from http://books.google.com/books?id=ebYnAAAAYAAJ&pg=RA2-PA49 William _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l