[Air-l] Origin of the term "Internet"
Jeremy Hunsinger
jhuns at vt.edu
Sat Mar 31 19:34:30 PDT 2007
the point was merely that your assertion is at best contrived and
seems to have no evidence other than your assertion. we know why
various parties choose things currently, house style, fashion of the
day... none of those reasons are ontological commitments. those
reasons are conventional commitments. the two might overlap, here,
they do not. unless you can provide evidence that technological
meaning, operating outside of the realm of convention, fashion, or
style, exists, then all that I see that you are saying is that, you
assert fiction x, and it explains the situation. so if we can find
that fiction x is not a fiction, we are fine, else, I wonder why you
are trying to make the argument. but hey, that's just me. you might
appreciate different standards of evidence.
On Mar 31, 2007, at 10:24 PM, James Whyte wrote:
> It would be helpful if you actually make a point.
>
> Jeremy Hunsinger <jhuns at vt.edu> wrote: I don't think there are any
> ontological commitments per se, if you
> want to construct them, that is fine, but i see diverse usages in
> technical and non-technical spheres, and I do not see any basis for
> the claim that there is any frame present for usage beyond fashion or
> common use. Specifically, other than style guidelines in some
> domains and presses, I don't think there is any basis to the position
> you are taking below, but if you can marshal evidence that outside of
> style-guide determined systems, there is a technical/non-technical
> split, I would love to see it. I participate in both and I see
> people migrating back and forth without issue.
> On Mar 31, 2007, at 3:55 PM, James Whyte wrote:
>
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jeremy hunsinger
Information Ethics Fellow, Center for Information Policy Research,
School of Information Studies, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
(www.cipr.uwm.edu)
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