Re: Spec-X?


 

We are also in process of having all the back issues scanned, ocr'd and turned into pdf's but that will be several months before the process is completed.


John

On Jan 1, 2011, at 12:56 PM, Sean A. Zera wrote:

 

Thanks. I've poked around the site on a number of occasions and didn't
find that even though I found where to buy back issues. It is not a
particularly intuitive website to navigate. Perhaps I will buy some
back issues, but I really don't have the space to devote to them.

Sean Z

Quoting John I Jones <j*@usjoneses.com>:

>
> On Jan 1, 2011, at 11:25 AM, Sean A. Zera wrote:
>
>>
>> Do you really feel that I need to have purchased and read every single
>> AIS bulletin before I can express an opinion about anything here?
>>
> I am sure no one means that and I do not think that is what Anner
> meant (not that she needs me to defend her).
>
>> As
>> far as I can tell, there is no index to back issues from which to pick
>> specific topics.
>>
> Actually there is an index available on the AIS website under: Iris
> Information/AIS Bulletins. Unfortunately it is not the most current
> (my fault) and I have attached the current version.
>
>
> John | "There be dragons here"
> | Annotation used by ancient cartographers
> | to indicate the edge of the known world.
>
> List owner i*@hort.net and i*@yahoogroups.com
> ________________________________________________
> USDA zone 8/9 (coastal, bay)
> Fremont, California, USA
> Director, American Iris Society
> Chairman, AIS Committee for Electronic Member Services
>
> Online Iris Checklists at: http://www.irisregister.com
>
> Subscribe to i*@hort.net by sending:
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> ________________________________________________
>
>
> ï
>
>
>>
>> SZ
>>
>> Quoting C*@aol.com:
>>
>>>
>>> I think people here have risen to the challenge of answering your
>>> many questions as responsibly and generously as anyone might
>>> reasonably expect. How many have you thanked?
>>>
>>> And yes, I reiterate that some of the responsibility for your own
>>> education lies with you.
>>>
>>> AMW
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>> From: Sean A. Zera <z*@umich.edu>
>>> To: i*@yahoogroups.com
>>> Sent: Sat, Jan 1, 2011 1:46 pm
>>> Subject: Re: [iris-species] Spec-X?
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> God forbid that anyone would try to learn something from other people
>>> on this forum, instead of earning that knowledge themselves.
>>>
>>> Quoting C*@aol.com:
>>>>
>>>> This is what I think:
>>>>
>>>> There is nothing the least bit unusual that a classification system
>>>> of anything would need to be, or benefit from,being refined over time.
>>>> Change is simply a positive response to ongoing thought, and may be
>>>> necessitated by the need to refine the system, or because that which
>>>> is being classified is changing, or because our understanding of
>>>> things changes. This is certainly not only the case of the AIS
>>>> system, it is also the case in the botanical world, rather
>>>> notoriously so.
>>>>
>>>> There is no reason whatsoever that if an iris meets the criteria for
>>>> IB and also a SPEC-X then it cannot be classified as both, or either.
>>>>
>>>> There is no reason to think that if one seedling is classed one way
>>>> its sibling---which it may or may not resemble closely--must also be
>>>> classified the same way. They are discrete and unique botanical
>>>> entities.
>>>>
>>>> There is no good reason to reclassify things every time something
>>>> changes. People who have an interest in these issues keep up with
>>>> the changes. People who don't keep up with them but who care about
>>>> the issues need to educate themselves. Nothing in life is static,
>>>> especially information.
>>>>
>>>> The purpose of the AIS classification system is to effect cogent
>>>> communication. It is an attempt by the collective to derive and
>>>> achieve concord towards an accurate descriptive vocabulary to be
>>>> used in discussions of a broad, numerous, various and ever expanding
>>>> body of unique cultivars reflecting highly personal tastes and
>>>> responses to a collective aesthetic vision which rewards
>>>> distinctiveness. It also defines what at any given time is
>>>> understood to be the ideal of a certain class, so that that ideal
>>>> may be understood and discussed, as a standard for evaluation and
>>>> comparison, and as a goal.
>>>>
>>>> This is not a compost heap, it is a quasi-casuistic dungpile. My
>>>> suggestion to anyone who seeks enlightenment here is: Read the
>>>> resources that AIS has published for you; buy or borrow the Check
>>>> Lists so you can see what they actually contain before carrying on
>>>> in an angry and paranoid manner; prioritize owning the basic
>>>> literature beyond the AIS publications and read that too; abandon
>>>> the idea that there is some boogeyman in the rainbow drama, and base
>>>> your education and opinions on verifiable facts.
>>>>
>>>> AMW
>>>> -------------------------
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
>
>




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