Zakonyi Florentina (Florentin's Laws) |
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Author:
| Smarandache, Florentin |
Translator:
| Shvedchikov, Adolf |
ISBN: | 978-952-67349-3-4 |
Publication Date: | Jan 2010 |
Publisher: | Multimedia Larga
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Book Format: | Paperback |
List Price: | EUR
€
10.00 |
Book Description:
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Being paradoxist in nature, Florentin¿s Laws are especially deviations, modifications, generalizations, contra-sayings, parodies, or mixtures of the previous Murphy¿s Laws and Peter¿s Laws. And also of aphorisms, proverbs, known citations, clichés, scientific results (from physics, mathematics, philosophy, ...), etc.
Alternatively, collations of opposite ideas - gathered from folklore, from ads, from literature, from familiar speech.
For example, Murphy¿s law
¿Anything that can go...
More DescriptionBeing paradoxist in nature, Florentin¿s Laws are especially deviations, modifications, generalizations, contra-sayings, parodies, or mixtures of the previous Murphy¿s Laws and Peter¿s Laws. And also of aphorisms, proverbs, known citations, clichés, scientific results (from physics, mathematics, philosophy, ...), etc.
Alternatively, collations of opposite ideas - gathered from folklore, from ads, from literature, from familiar speech.
For example, Murphy¿s law
¿Anything that can go wrong will go wrong¿
which in Peter¿s law is stated as:
¿If anything can go wrong, Fix It!¿
becomes in Florentin¿s law, through deviation:
¿If anything can go wrong, pass it on to someone else!¿
in a Machiavelli way, as a mixture of pessimism / optimism and laugh!
In the above example, while Murphy¿s law output is negative and Peter¿s law output is positive, Florentin¿s law output is indeterminate [perversity] as in neutrosophic logic (i. e. the problem has not be solved, but passed to another person!... it¿s a trickery (deception, cunning, dodge, swindle, caper, subterfuge).
Each Florentin's Law should include: negative (pessimism) and positive (optimism) attributes, while its conclusion should be moderate ¿ often trickery bended with humor.