2-Place and 1-Place Words

WikiLast edit: 17 Nov 2009 21:07 UTC by Zack_M_Davis

A 2-place word acts as a function of 2 arguments (“2-place function”). For example:

Sexiness: Admirer, Entity -> [0, ∞)

A 1-place word acts as a function of 1 argument (“1-place function”). For example:

Sexiness: Entity -> [0, ∞)

Treating a 2-place word as a 1-place word can result in silly mistakes like assuming that a bug-eyed monster would naturally want to carry off a girl in a torn dress. People think as if sexiness is an inherent property of a sexy entity, without dependence on the admirer.

“Of course the bug-eyed monster will prefer human females to its own kind,” says the artist (who we’ll call Fred); “it can see that human females have soft, pleasant skin instead of slimy scales. It may be an alien, but it’s not stupid—why are you expecting it to make such a basic mistake about sexiness?”

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See also