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Dec. 24th, 2002 04:05 pmThis is probably the most brutal quiz I've ever seen. Here's last year's. Here are the answers from last year. Ow. I got four this year, assuming I was correct when I think I was, but I'm pretty confident.
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Date: 2002-12-25 01:43 pm (UTC)General knowledge is a very good thing. However, the fate of Sansovino's loggetta isn't general knowledge, it's specific knowledge. Similarly, why should Cole Porter lyrics and not Tori Amos lyrics be "general" knowledge? Why are the details of cheese-making "general knowledge"?
This quiz, for the most part, isn't general knowledge; it really is trivia. And the distinction I intended to make before is between trivia where you know it or you don't and trivia where you haven't heard it, but if you think it through, you could reason your way to an answer. Trivial Pursuit has both, and people generally enjoy more the ones where they slap their foreheads when they hear the answer and say, "Ohhhhh! Of course!" then the ones where they roll their eyes and say, "Oh, of course" in heavily sarcastic tones.
And: of course "there's something to be said for learning how to properly research." Hence the motto, “Scire ubi aliquid invenire possis, ea demum maxima pars eruditionis est.” But then, “Googling all this stuff up” is research in a sense--certainly I can’t think of any better way to learn what Sansovino's loggetta is. (It comes up immediately on a Google hit. I know where I might start looking in a library, but it would take me quite a while. Is that a bad thing? I don’t see why it should be one, if I found the answer.)
So as I said, my take on it is: interesting challenge to see if you can do a lot of library research, if you want to take it as such; mildly interesting challenge to see if you can Google things; quite uninteresting test of what you do or don’t know.
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Date: 2002-12-25 03:30 pm (UTC)