Talk:Universal grinder
This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Unappealing
[edit]I suspect that this was an opinion inserted by the editor who wrote it, and not an essential idea about the "universal grinder" phenomenon:
- sentences made using the "universal grinder" can sometimes appear unappealing
Pelltier makes no such claim. In fact, some of his examples (mashed potato, [ground] steak) seem downright appealing to me. Of course, that's just my opinion. More importantly, I can find no one asserting that the "universal grinder" produces "unappealing" sentences. Or more precisely, I can find this exact sentence on the web, but those cases were almost certainly copied from Wikipedia. I cannot find this idea in books or scholarly articles. Cnilep (talk) 04:12, 29 September 2016 (UTC)
Emmon Bach
[edit]If memory serves, I think Emmon Bach was the first to use "universal packager", but I can't seem to find a reliable source to verify this.
- Bach, Emmon (February 1986). "The Algebra of Events". Linguistics and Philosophy. 9 (1).
- Start-Class Linguistics articles
- Unknown-importance Linguistics articles
- Start-Class Theoretical Linguistics articles
- Theoretical Linguistics Task Force articles
- WikiProject Linguistics articles
- Start-Class Philosophy articles
- Unknown-importance Philosophy articles
- Start-Class logic articles
- Unknown-importance logic articles
- Logic task force articles
- Start-Class Analytic philosophy articles
- Unknown-importance Analytic philosophy articles
- Analytic philosophy task force articles