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by mlyle
1137 days ago
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> (chongli used CAD as an example of a ritual. now__what asked "is that really what ritual means?". You said yes. It was one of two examples, being the latter one after "heck" which indicates it's probably not a perfect fit.
It was the weakest but it still works. > I didn't claim that a ritual has to be ineffective; only that (1) it needs to have symbolic significance It does. Perhaps less now. You mash these keys when your computer isn't doing what you want. > it needs to have elements that are there for purposes other than what they actually do It used to be something that the BIOS would perform a soft reset in response to a keyboard interrupt and those keys being down. It was chosen to be across the keyboard (to prevent activation by mistake). All of the functional aspects of it are dead and the original meaning is gone (including the location of keys). For unclear reasons this ritual got appropriated for other purposes (the original reasons for it don't relate to the new uses). |
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The components of the CAD gesture are still there for the purpose of what they do: you hit those keys because those are the ones Windows recognizes as indicating that you want to get its attention. Yes, the reason why those particular keys is kinda arbitrary these days, but (1) that isn't what the authors of that paper meant by "lacking overt instrumental purpose" -- of course there's an overt instrumental purpose: you hit those keys to get the OS's attention in ways that let you do particular things -- and (2) "there are elements that are kinda arbitrary" does not a ritual make because, again, everything has elements that are kinda arbitrary.
I don't want to claim that the use of the term "ritual" to describe hitting C-A-D is 100% indefensible. Only like 99.5%. If you generalize "ritual" far enough then eventually it will cover this case. Along with writing the word "duck", opening a window, or eating breakfast cereal. I don't think a generalization that goes that far is useful: the things that are "at least as ritual-like as C-A-D" are too broad a class to say much about that's useful, and the class isn't much different from that of "all human actions that recur at all".