Skip to main content

Logic, like whiskey, loses its beneficial effect when taken in too large quantities.


I am happy to admit that I don't really get this one. I’ve run through a variety of options, but don’t feel that I am any closer to answering the puzzle.
  • A circle? Too obvious.
  • A parallelogram? It has potential, but too obscure.
  • A fish?
  • A table?
  • A remaindered piece of fabric faded by exposure to sunlight for sustained periods?
The choices appear too endless to contemplate. If I disappear down that road trying to solve this conundrum, I’ll not have any time for any thought beyond this thought.

Is that what they mean? Some devious plan hatched by modern day anarcho-syndicalists designed to cripple (ostensibly) free thinkers like myself? If I’m spending all of my time thinking about what I need to be thinking outside of, I am thus far less likely to be thinking about how I can prevent the overthrow of all that I hold dear by a bunch of cunning shysters.

This thinkin' business is hard work.

Answers on a postcard will be most welcome.

Comments

Pat said…
I never got this either. I guess they're just telling you to back up and look at the big picture, which isn't always as square or round or whatever, as it first appears.

Thanks for your comment on my blog today.
Anonymous said…
Hmmm. I wonder if you're not just spending too much time agonising over the poncey pseudo-intellectualese ramblings of a sociology student who thinks he's cleverer than he actually is?
I think that in this case I would prefer the Whisky!!
Anonymous said…
Oh good. I looked and went huh?

But i will take a whiskey if it is on offer!
It's not a square, it's a square with a bite taken out--which you can only do if yr thinking outside the box.

Or, it's an observatory.

Or, . . . duh?
Neva said…
It is a reference to "thnking outside of the box" so the obvioius thing to me is that outside the box is not where the answers are...it is in the box where you don't want to look...but then I am neither a student nor a philosopher...so what do I know???
Priyanka Khot said…
went over my head!!!
Kris McCracken said…
I think that I can borrow a phrase from Churchill (when talking about the Soviet Union’s pre-WWII intentions): It is a riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma.

I would paraphrase though: It is a riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma, rolled into a conundrum, sellotaped with a puzzle and tacked onto a query.
Kris McCracken said…
Bibi, I suspect that you are correct.

Jackie, well, the art school is not that far away...

Blognote, whisky it is!

BARKEEP!
Kris McCracken said…
Greg, it is right by the distillery, (if I correctly remember where I spotted it).

Mary, their stencil may have been damaged in the process...

Neva, I blame the Welsh!

Priyanka, I shall ask Sachin Tendulkar next time I see him, he’ll know! ;)
Anonymous said…
O SHUT UP everyone telling us all how to think! Love the old New Yorker cartoon with the "THINK" sign in the office washroom, subverted by the little graffito with "thoap" and an arrow. Probably only works as a visual joke tho.

From 40km S of Hobart. Also love Tasmania!
Kris McCracken said…
Hiltonsister, Paris Hilton's sister?
Amanda Lozada said…
It's not a square they're asking you to look outside - it's yourself.
Kris McCracken said…
Amanda, d'ya think?

Popular posts from this blog

Ah, Joe, you never knew the whole of it...

I still have the robot on the job. Here you can see the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery . And here is a poem: Soliloquy for One Dead Bruce Dawe Ah, no, Joe, you never knew the whole of it, the whistling which is only the wind in the chimney's smoking belly, the footsteps on the muddy path that are always somebody else's. I think of your limbs down there, softly becoming mineral, the life of grasses, and the old love of you thrusts the tears up into my eyes, with the family aware and looking everywhere else. Sometimes when summer is over the land, when the heat quickens the deaf timbers, and birds are thick in the plumbs again, my heart sickens, Joe, calling for the water of your voice and the gone agony of your nearness. I try hard to forget, saying: If God wills, it must be so, because of His goodness, because- but the grasshopper memory leaps in the long thicket, knowing no ease. Ah, Joe, you never knew the whole of it... I like Bruce Dawe. He just my be my favourite Austral...

There was nothing left. No reason, no conscience, no understanding; even the most rudimentary sense of life or death, good or evil, right or wrong.

Here is a self portrait. I’m calling it Portrait of a lady in a dirty window . Shocking, isn’t it? However, it is apt! Samhain , Nos Galan Gaeaf , Hop-tu-Naa , All Saints , All Hallows , Hallowmas , Hallowe'en or HALLOWEEN . It’s Theme Thursday and we’re talking about the festivals traditionally held at the end of the harvest season. Huh? No wonder Australians have trouble with the concept of HALLOWEEN. For the record, in my thirty-two L O N G years on the planet, I can’t say I’ve ever seen ghosts ‘n goblins, trick ‘n treaters or Michael Myers stalking Tasmania’s streets at the end of October. [That said, I did once see a woman as pale as a ghost turning tricks that looked like Michael Myers in late November one time.] Despite the best efforts of Hollywood, sitcoms, and innumerable companies; it seems Australians are impervious to the [ahem] charms of a corporatized variant of a celebration of the end of the "lighter half" of the year and beginning of the "darke...

In dreams begin responsibilities.

A life at sea, that's for me, only I just don't have the BREAD. That's right, Theme Thursday yet again and I post a photo of a yacht dicking about in Bass Strait just off Wynyard. The problem is, I am yet again stuck at work, slogging away, because I knead need the dough . My understanding is that it is the dough that makes the BREAD. And it is the BREAD that buys the yacht. On my salary though, I will be lucky to have enough dough or BREAD for a half dozen dinner rolls. Happy Theme Thursday people, sorry for the rush.