- Joined
- Oct 22, 2005
deductive conclusion: a flutz is stubborn?
Yes, it's a stubborn animal to fix.
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deductive conclusion: a flutz is stubborn?
Your proposal does not help. Maybe to Joesitz and those who agree with him, a flutz (i.e. Lutz with a wrong edge takeoff) is more like a round square. In their view, the description defies the definition.Maybe it would help to think about the intent and utility of definitions more generally.
If you want to know what a donkey is you could turn to the dictionary and maybe read something like this:
Definition: A donkey is a stocky four-legged animal similar to a horse, typically used as a beast of burden and reputed to have a stubborn streak.
Two problems are immediate.
1. What if you see a three-legged donkey? It is still a donkey, even though it does not satisfy the definition (a “four-legged animal…”)
2. If someone really wants to know what a donkey is, this definition – or any – does not help much. You have to go to a farm and see one for yourself.
Similarly, we come to a definition of as Lutz jump by seeing lots of excellent skaters do them, starting with Alois Lutz in 1913. Then we abstract what we see to something like this.
Definition: A Lutz jump is a toe-pick assisted figure skating jump that takes off from an outside back edge, typically preceded by a long glide on that edge and with the rotation of the body in the air in the opposite direction to the curve of the blade on the ice, and landed after one or more rotations in the air on the outside back edge of the opposite foot.
A flutz is a three-legged donkey.
This definition is very common; it showed up in the top couple of internet dictionaries when I Google'd "definition" "donkey".don·key (dngk, dng-, dông-)
n. pl. don·keys
1. The domesticated *** (Equus asinus).
A three-legged donkey is still a domesticated Equus asinus.
I don't think so. When I refer to a donkey as a species, I can then go with the most basic understanding of a species and say that they are creatures that are "capable of interbreeding and producing fertile offspring." Then you can go look at whatever is called an "equus asinus" as a reference and with high accuracy, scientifically credibly state what qualifies as a donkey and what doesn't. E.g. a mule is not a donkey, although mules can also be described as "a stocky four-legged animal similar to a horse, typically used as a beast of burden and reputed to have a stubborn streak."I think that's circular. What is an equus asinus?
Not true. If I had some working knowledge of what the genus "equus" constitutes, then I have some idea of what equus asinus is like. Similar in some way, to a horse. As in your definition. And if I had never seen a horse but I'd seen a zebra and knew that zebras are also part of genus equus, then mine has more utility than yours.As for utility, if you have never seen a donkey, and someone tells you, oh, that's an equus asinus, no information has been imparted.
Sorry, I stand by my viewpoint definitions are our jailers. (Wait, that was never my viewpoint, but oh well.)Definitions are our servants, not our jailers.![]()
"don·key (dngk, dng-, dông-) n. pl. don·keys
1. The domesticated a$$ (Equus asinus)."
This definition is very common; it showed up in the top couple of internet dictionaries when I Google'd "definition" "donkey".
A three-legged donkey is still a domesticated Equus asinus.
I do not believe Joesitz or I was ever making the argument that definitions are "our jailers." Please elaborate on how anyone was making that argument.I am no wiser than before. I looked up "a$$": "any of several hardy gregarious African or Asian perissodactyl mammals (genus Equus) smaller than the horse and having long ears."
Now we're getting somewhere. A flutz is a donkey with an even number of toes.
Anyway, the point I was making is that definitions are our servants, not our jailers.
I know Midori was one of the best jumpers ever (probably THE best jumper ever, actually), but she lipped too!
Well let me tell you a story about it then.
I punched Midori Ito's lip one time. We were drinking and she was getting too roudy. What else was I supposed to do? She bled. Turns out her blood is green. I was tempted to lick her now bloody lip because I was reminded of absinthe but then I realized "Wow, maybe she's an alien. It might kill me."
Midori and I stopped being friends after that night. Her side of this story will likely be much different.

Well let me tell you a story about it then.
I punched Midori Ito's lip one time. We were drinking and she was getting too roudy. What else was I supposed to do? She bled. Turns out her blood is green. I was tempted to lick her now bloody lip because I was reminded of absinthe but then I realized "Wow, maybe she's an alien. It might kill me."
Midori and I stopped being friends after that night. Her side of this story will likely be much different.
Well now, we have a Revisionist Definition especially if an element is difficult. What other jump can we revise? We must continue to pamper the skaters.It's not an "imaginary Lutz", it's a Lutz that the skater doesn't hold the counter-check position quite long enough for it to take off from the outside edge (usually under 1/2 second). It's not an "imaginary flip", either, it's a flip where the skater cross checks a little too hard on the reach back causing them to roll over to a slight outside edge. I can say from personal experience on the Lutz, it's hard to get the timing exactly right to Lutz all the time, especially when amped (liked in competition) and that I've seen skaters who NEVER flip the edge in practice release their upper body just early enough to get a call when competing.

Why don't we revise the definition of skating elements to be more like donkeys?Two problems are immediate.
1. What if you see a three-legged donkey? It is still a donkey, even though it does not satisfy the definition (a “four-legged animal…”)
2. If someone really wants to know what a donkey is, this definition – or any – does not help much. You have to go to a farm and see one for yourself.
Similarly, we come to a definition of as Lutz jump by seeing lots of excellent skaters do them, starting with Alois Lutz in 1913. Then we abstract what we see to something like this.
Definition: A Lutz jump is a toe-pick assisted figure skating jump that takes off from an outside back edge, typically preceded by a long glide on that edge and with the rotation of the body in the air in the opposite direction to the curve of the blade on the ice, and landed after one or more rotations in the air on the outside back edge of the opposite foot.
Why don't we revise the definition of skating elements to be more like donkeys?![]()
I do not believe Joesitz or I was ever making the argument that definitions are "our jailers." Please elaborate on how anyone was making that argument.
...the point is not to invalidate an entire jump pass over a balanced program rule technicality.
have you seen a loop jump land on a back inside edge. I would say that was a Wrong Edge Landing.I think we have.
For instance, we have revised the definition that says "a loop jump is a jump that takes off on a back outside edge and lands on the back outside edge of the same foot." If the skater lands on an inside edge, that violates the definition. But -- since definitions are not our jailers -- we score that as a "loop jump" even though the definition is not satisfied.