T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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585.1 | The heck with snow - why is it COLD!! | MERIDN::ROSCETTI | must not be drinkin' enough.. | Wed Dec 02 1987 10:55 | 32 |
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If snow suddenly came to my tropic island I'd probably be more
concerned with where the COLD that preceded it came from..
And when I picked up the snow in my hand and it turned to water
i'd probably figure it out..
Now if someone were trying to explain it to me
I suppose I would have to assume that you were making it up.
At least until you could explain/demonstrate how temp changes
produce state changes, water to ice etc. Then again I might just
assume the world is a bigger place than I had known..
My reaction to a persons attempt to alter "my" perception of reality
is usually influenced by two things,
1. the magnitude of the change - if you told me snow is real
and it's coming to my little tropical isle next week I
might get upset.
2. their reasons for enlightening me. - If you were trying
to sell me a parka and snowblower, just in case this
"snow" stuff ever happens here...
If you want to read an old (50's) (short)story about something similar,
check out Isaac Asimov's "NIGHTFALL". It's about a world with
two suns. Night(darkness/stars etc) only occurs once every
thousand or so years. The reaction is .. well I won't tell..
Brien
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585.2 | Case Study | PROSE::WAJENBERG | Just a trick of the light. | Wed Dec 02 1987 11:24 | 26 |
| I was actually present when someone saw snow for the first time.
I was in a classroom, and one of the other pupils was a young woman
from Bangaledesh. She had, of course, heard of snow and seen it
in paintings, photos, and movies, but she had never seen it in
"person."
While the professor droned on, I happened to notice the first flakes
of the first snow of the year. I kept my eye on Ms. Gulshan.
Eventually, her attention wandered from the less-than-rivetting
lecture and she noticed the white flakes outside. Her eyes grew
very round. After a few seconds, she leaned toward me and stage-
whispered, "Is that snow?" I assured her it was. I don't think
she looked back at the professor for the rest of the lecture.
A few days later, she came limping into the graduate office. By
now we had about six inches on the ground. "I don't like the snow
anymore," she declared. "I fell down three times on my way over
here and the more careful I was, the more often I fell!" I admitted
it took getting used to. "It will all melt before it snows again,
won't it?" she asked nervously. I said there was no guarantee.
"But how will I get out of my dorm?!" she asked anxiously. I explained
that we would shovel the stuff away. The light dawned in her eyes
as she realized we had a whole technology for coping with snow --
something she'd never contemplated.
Earl Wajenberg
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585.3 | Snowing even as I type...BRR, shiver | GLORY::WETHERINGTON | | Wed Dec 02 1987 13:24 | 14 |
| Interesting question...I've tried before to convince people of the
existence of things they haven't seen before, and the usual reaction
is "if I can't see it right here in front of my own eyes, then it
can't possibly exist...not only does it not exist for me, but since
*I've* never seen it, it can't possibly exist for you either; you've
been halucinating"...I think it's enormously arrogant to assume
that your own personal field of experience is so wide and
all-encompassing that you are aware of everything that exists or
could possibly exist in the universe, and if you don't know about
it, it can't possibly exist.
:^)
Doug
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585.4 | The Magic of Beleiving | HBO::PERMON | ERP OF ICO | Wed Dec 02 1987 13:27 | 23 |
| RE .-2
I recall the Asimov story referenced. I also recall the ending but will
not give it away here.
But now picture this. It is from an old TV story that I recalled.
Missionary is sent to the middle of Africa. Has difficulties converting
natives since they can not picture his God.
He has some old Currier and Ives prints including one of people ice skating.
Natives can not beleive this either. Water solid enough to support a person?
Missionary obtains cooling unit and freezes box filled with water. He strips
away the outer box and is left with one giant ice cube.
Natives who watched the freezing consider it magic when he then steps up
onto the ice cube. But they are then much easier to convert.
I make no further comment.
Ed Permon
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585.5 | ayup | LEZAH::BOBBITT | a collie down isnt a collie beaten | Wed Dec 02 1987 13:37 | 6 |
| required reading: Ezra Jack Keats (?) - The Snowy Day.
enchanting children's book, w/lovely illustrations
-Jody
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585.6 | IF A WHOLE NATION SEE/HEAR OF SNOW-FIRST TIME | USRCV1::JEFFERSONL | SATAN I BIND YOU, IN JESUS NAME!! | Wed Dec 02 1987 14:09 | 17 |
|
I feel that, fr the "first time of seeing or hearing of snow"
would probably cause the school, jobs, and everything else to be
closed and that, everyone is not to leave their homes for any reason
at all until the science researchers find out what it is, where
it came from, and what harm it could be to the human body. funny
it may seem; I think there would be "religious" people began to
worship it, or they might think that the end is here:-) (That's
if a Nation experience snow for the first time) Could you imagine
everybody walking around with chemical suits/gloves and boots on;
scared to let the snow touch their skin? I think it would be pretty
comical:-)
LORENZO
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585.7 | From the mouths of ... | BUSY::MAXMIS11 | | Wed Dec 02 1987 15:48 | 12 |
| I was present when a five year old Mexican boy saw snow for the
first time. He had heard of it and perhaps had seen pictures of
it, but he obviously hadn't given it much thought. Upon seeing
it on the front lawn, he asked if it would stay there forever.
His mother explained that it would melt once the weather was warmer.
He seemed to ponder that for a while. He knew what it was for
something to melt, because he had seen ice cream melt and ice cubes
melt. He gazed out the window without saying a word for a while
and then asked "When it melts, will it become ... milk?"
Marion
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585.8 | You must be joking maan! | KYOMTS::COHEN | Dynamo Hum........ | Wed Dec 02 1987 16:10 | 14 |
| When I was in Barbados last year I was trying to explain the
concept of snow to some locals. They absolutly did not believe
that such a thing as snow could possibly exist. No matter how hard
I tried they did not believe that anything frozen could possibly
fall from the sky. They also refused to believe the concept of
changing seasons where all the leaves fall off the trees. I wish
I had some pictures.....
Another concept they had difficulty with was the fact that I lived
and worked on an Island about the size of theirs (NYC) except instead
of 200,000 inhabitants NYC had over 8 million!
Paradise?????
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585.9 | There are things out there we think are crazy! | HPSCAD::DDOUCETTE | Crazy? I could be so lucky! | Wed Dec 02 1987 16:41 | 4 |
| Sure, we can experience snow, but what about experiencing tropical
things, like seeing your first palm tree, or jungle, or desert.
The world is full of fun and strange things, what makes it stranger
is that we've never seen it before.
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585.10 | words.... | CIMNET::PIERSON | | Wed Dec 02 1987 17:36 | 10 |
| Its all in the perspective. I once heard that an "eskimo" language
had no word for snow...
It did have about a hundred words for the various different things
that we uninformed folk from the "tropics" call snow.
The things we encounter and which we think we understand can be
well described, things infrequently encountered are another matter.
dave pierson
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585.11 | Is your snow flakier than mine? | PUZZLE::GUEST_TMP | HOME, in spite of my ego! | Thu Dec 03 1987 00:41 | 17 |
| I was born in Syracuse (yes, that's correct, Lorenzo) but
only spent about 3 years there before moving to Miami, then Cuba.
I have no early-life memory so I had no conscious memory of snow
at the time that I finally saw it at age 15.
For me, one of the things I found most interesting was that
snow was so tiny (in school we had cut out snow flakes and they
were always 6-12" big.) I will say that adapting to the cold was
more difficult than adjusting to the snow. Also, it was very
easy to get into "snow things" (my sister and I built a snowman
right away.)
I don't know what this has to do with psychic phenomena but
an earlier response said it fairly well...we all create different
realities and what is "truth" for one is possibly "fantasy" or
"conjecture" for another.
Frederick
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585.12 | Blind: burn one-eyed man at stake! | SEINE::RAINVILLE | I'll see it when I believe it! | Thu Dec 03 1987 01:14 | 10 |
| Yes, how do you convince someone of something they've never
experienced which you know is true? Add the urgency of a
need to prepare for the unforseen/unexpected and we can see
how a prophet is labeled a maniac. Very good topic.
It reminds me of trying to educate production managers to the
fact that a mysterious concept called 'quality' will actually
save them expense and aggrivation. If they havn't experienced
it they have absolutly no basis for belief! ;-} MWR
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585.13 | | FSLENG::JOLLIMORE | For the greatest good... | Thu Dec 03 1987 10:38 | 12 |
| .6 LORENZO
> ............................................... Could you imagine
> everybody walking around with chemical suits/gloves and boots on;
> scared to let the snow touch their skin? I think it would be pretty
> comical:-)
I laugh at how alien my daughter looks every time she dresses to go out
and play in the snow. I bet she would look scary to someone who has no
concept of snow and cold.
Jay
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585.14 | Snow and Ocean | CSC32::M_BAKER | | Thu Dec 03 1987 20:12 | 14 |
| One winter I lived in Ohio and had a friend from Lousiana. We were both
in our 20's. One evening after the first snowfall of the year we were
walking down the street and he kept running off the sidewalk into the
snow and jumping around like a child. I asked him was wrong and he
said that he had never seen snow before. By the end of the winter
he wasn't so happy.
I remember the first time I saw the ocean. I was in the second grade.
My family had moved from the midwest to the east coast. One weekend we
went to the beach. The movies and pictures did not prepare me for the
actual experience. I remember wondering if they shut the waves down at
night or let it run constantly.
Mike
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585.15 | JUMPED & SUNK | USRCV1::JEFFERSONL | SATAN I BIND YOU, IN JESUS NAME!! | Fri Dec 04 1987 09:14 | 13 |
| RE:14
Seeing the Ocean for the first time reminds me of when I saw a
swimming pool for the first time: when I was in about the 1st grade,
we all (my class mates and I) went to the swimming pool; I watched
all the other kids run and jump into the pool, and started swimming,
so, by it being my first time ever seeing a pool, I ran and jumped
in, AND SUNK!! If the teacher wasn't there, I WOULD HAVE DROWNED8-}
LORENZO
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585.16 | ...in the eye of the beholder ... | ERASER::KALLIS | Remember how ephemeral is Earth. | Fri Dec 04 1987 09:32 | 14 |
| Re "seeing the ocean":
The writer, Isaac Asimov, mentioned anecdotally that when he was
(a deaftee) on a troop ship, the ship ran into a rainstorm in transit
between ports. He was astonished that it rained on the ocean.
"It's such a _waste_!" he indicated he'd said.
Funny how preconceptions can trip us up, isn't it?
Re .15 (Lorenzo):
You were lucky!
Steve Kallis, Jr.
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585.17 | Its loud | SALES::RFI86 | | Fri Dec 04 1987 12:36 | 12 |
|
When I was at boarding school we had a student from Guatamala who had
never seen snow. He had heard all about it of course but had never
seen it. When we got our first snow he said he had been ready for
the cold and the white wet water falling from the sky but no one
had prepared him for the fact that it crunched under his feet when
he walked. He thought it was the strangest neates thing he had ever
heard. By the end of the winter he had become a fairly accomplished
skier
Geoff
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585.18 | snowplows? what are snowplows? | USAT02::CARLSON | set person/positive | Fri Dec 04 1987 15:07 | 7 |
| Since we only see maybe one snowfall a year, the Atlanta people
act like it's the first one ever. It's comical really, everything
shuts down, you risk your life driving because the ones on the road,
can't. And just try to get any work done...
I could imagine a snowstorm in Florida! ;^o
Theresa.
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585.19 | | STEREO::BURT | | Mon Dec 07 1987 10:09 | 9 |
|
As a matter of fact, I was living in Jacksonville, Florida about
12 years ago when they had a light dusting of snow. Got a big kick
out of the kids - they had socks on their hands in place of mittens
to wipe the little bit of snow off the cars. They're really innovative
huh?
Rosemary
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