tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7287973212850725428.post3965457675986023390..comments2016-06-21T21:53:03.521+09:00Comments on Seo Sanghyeon: PinballSeo Sanghyeonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00961438344137964299noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7287973212850725428.post-48780984905024455232008-04-06T15:56:00.000+09:002008-04-06T15:56:00.000+09:00Thanks again, Sanghyeon, for another enlightening ...Thanks again, Sanghyeon, for another enlightening post. It is certainly easy for me to understand the idea of pursuing fresh research or new projects and problems as a pleasure in its own right; I've stopped halfway through otherwise excellent novels when I suspected I had understood what the author was getting at- I hadn't the patience for the author's endgame. I shall not risk enrolling us both in Foucault's School of Comparative Irrelevance by questioning you further on this perhaps unprofitable line of questioning. <BR/><BR/>Perhaps your love of puzzles explains the conlang connection? <BR/><BR/>Setting up and solving your own problems seems to reflect the sort of perpetual motion machine of the mind that teachers love to see. Often, you alone will be able to provide yourself challenges equal to your intellect. <BR/><BR/>JamesJames Knaackhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16174413083275015579noreply@blogger.com