Andrés E. Caicedo
@andrescaicedo01.bsky.social
740 followers 700 following 200 posts
Father of two. Set theorist. Editor at Math Reviews.
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andrescaicedo01.bsky.social
If anyone here has access to the "Journal of the Early Book Society", I would be most grateful if you could send me "The Scribal Transmission of Northern Dialect in the Reeve’s Tale" by
Thomas J. Farrell, pp. 75-110 in Vol 25 (2022).
I do not currently have access to interlibrary loan. (Thanks!)
andrescaicedo01.bsky.social
Anybody here with access to the Times Literary Supplement? There is an article from last year I would like to read.
andrescaicedo01.bsky.social
If anybody with access to "American Literary Manuscripts : An Essay Review" by John C Broderick (Resources for American Literary Study (1976) 6 (1): 85–95) could share the review with me, I would be most grateful.
andrescaicedo01.bsky.social
Hoping someone can help me here: what would be a library or online resource (or other options) where I could find some of the publications of the (long defunct) Center for Editions of American Authors? Particularly their Newsletter, their reply to E. Wilson, their Statement of editorial principles.
andrescaicedo01.bsky.social
The distinction between the strict and non-strict version is useful, sure. For instance in analysis, any continuous monotone function is differentiable a.e. But its derivative is never zero if strictly increasing, while the Cantor function, which is non-strictly increasing, has zero derivative a.e.
andrescaicedo01.bsky.social
This was fun! I wouldn't have made a big deal (or a deal at all) about the "too" in the sentence, so I guess it also taught something about English. Again, thank you.
Reposted by Andrés E. Caicedo
lisafdavis.bsky.social
I have an amazing opportunity Sept. 15-19. I'll be at the Santa Fe Institute with a dozen invited humanists and scientists discussing this topic: "How do we reconcile traditional humanistic inquiry with mathematical modeling approaches that are reshaping knowledge production?" 1/5
andrescaicedo01.bsky.social
Thanks. It's been too long since I've read Lakatos. Will revisit.
andrescaicedo01.bsky.social
😀 Ah, excellent! Again, many thanks.
andrescaicedo01.bsky.social
Now I'm curious. Do you know other examples of papers where, similarly, the authors disagree on some point, and argue their opposite positions separately?
/End
andrescaicedo01.bsky.social
The authors begin by saying that they disagree on the answer. Smith argues for 5 pages that it is No, and then Walker argues for the other 5 that it is Yes.
(Cont.)
andrescaicedo01.bsky.social
"Did the Infantes de Carrión intend to kill the Cid's daughters?"
Colin Smith & Roger M. Walker
Bulletin of Hispanic Studies, 56:1, 1-10,
doi.org/10.1080/1475...
(Cont.)
Did the Infantes de Carrión intend to kill the Cid's daughters?
Published in Bulletin of Hispanic Studies (Vol. 56, No. 1, 1979)
doi.org
andrescaicedo01.bsky.social
A natural question is whether they actually meant to kill them or not. I found a paper on this topic that discusses it following what seems to me to be an unusual approach:
(Cont.)
andrescaicedo01.bsky.social
Reposted from Mathstodon, because I am still interested:

In "Cantar de Mio Cid", the infantes de Carrión, married to the Cid's daughters, decide to repudiate them, take them to an isolated area, beat them within an inch of their lives, and abandon them.
(Cont.)
andrescaicedo01.bsky.social
Great! Thank you. (That original price, though.)
Sir Thomas Malory, Le Morte Darthur, ed. P. J. C. Field. 2 vols. (Arthurian Studies 80.) Cambridge, UK, and Rochester, NY: D. S. Brewer, 2013. Pp. xliii, 940 (1); xxxi, 988 (2). $340. ISBN: 978-1-84384-314-6. doi:10.1086/686493.
andrescaicedo01.bsky.social
(Sorry to revive an old thread.) Can you recommend a recent edition of the book that is not modernized? It seems harder to find than I expected.
andrescaicedo01.bsky.social
Can you share the name of the article? It sounds interesting!