24 JAN 2012 by ideonexus

 A Strange Way to Categorize Stones and Metals

Consider the eighth category, which deals with stones. Wilkins divides them into the following classifications: ordinary (flint, gravel, slate); intermediate (marble, amber, coral); precious (pearl, opal); transparent (amethyst, sapphire); and insoluble (coal, clay, and arsenic). The ninth category is almost as alarming as the eighth. It reveals that metals can be imperfect (vermilion, quicksilver); artificial (bronze, brass); recremental (filings, rust); and natural (gold, tin, copper). The ...
Folksonomies: taxonomy categorization
Folksonomies: taxonomy categorization
  1  notes

Jorge Luis Borges compares the method to an ancient Chinese method of categorizing animals.