Date: Mon, 8 Apr 1996 11:30:26 -0400
From: "M. Lynne Murphy" 104LYN[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]MUSE.ARTS.WITS.AC.ZA
Subject: begging the question
can't remember who was collecting "beg the questions", but here is
another. i have no idea which reading to assign to this use. i
think the phrase has become so ambiguous as to be meaningless to me.
from "public sector salaries 'justified'" by phillipa garson, _weekly
mail and guardian_ (south africa), 4-11 april 1996:
"A director of a leading mining house or public company like Escom
can earn almost twice as much as the president, begging the question
of whether salaries in the private sector are not grossly inflated."
now, i would say that this gets the newer reading ('begging for the
question to be asked'), except that the article is about public
sector salaries, not private (this sentence is sort of a non-sequitur
paragraph), so maybe they are using the old meaning ('avoiding the
question'). i dunno.
lynne
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