Circ (game)
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The Irish mathematician and physicist, John Lighton Synge, created the two-person zero-sum game of Circ to emphasize the circular reasoning which is implicit in the defining process of any standard dictionary. It has become a popular and effective activity in language education classrooms.
[edit] Procedure
- Each of the two players is given a copy of the same standard dictionary;
- the referee gives each a slip of paper with the same word (found in this dictionary) written on each slip -- word chosen so that it has synonyms in its definition, but (preferably) the definition of any synonym does not (in that dictionary) list a synonym which is the originally assigned word;
- at "Go!", each looks up the assigned word, finds a synonym, looks that up, finds a synonym, etc;
- the first player to be led, by this synonymous process, back to the originally assigned word cries "Circ!" and wins the game (unless his opponent successfully challenges the procedure of the alleged winner).
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- Synge, John Lighton (1951). Science: Sense and Nonsense. Ayer Co Pub. ISBN 0836973321.[1][2] (search contents)