My favourite is certainly Hamlet’s little speech to Horatio. The underlying point of the statement is quite clearly laid out in venn diagram form: Epistemology at its best.
@Nick Apparentely there are dozens of different ways of spelling ol’ Bill’s surname - indeed in the six surviving copies of his handwriting he spells it differently each time ( http://www.sheldoncomics.com/archive/070810.html )
Sadly I stumbled across one of the few typos which would land me in “definately wrong” territory - I’ve now fixed it.
When I read panel two, I was actually thinking to myself, “doesn’t he know that’s a Euler diagram? I guess he only knows Venn diagrams from pop culture.” And then I read the title text, and I was relieved.
I get out plenty!
Yet it’s still not enough.
This is amazingly well done.
My favourite is certainly Hamlet’s little speech to Horatio. The underlying point of the statement is quite clearly laid out in venn diagram form: Epistemology at its best.
These would make great T-shirt material.
“Shakespeare”
You missed an ‘e’. (I really don’t mean to be an ass about it, I swear).
@Nick Apparentely there are dozens of different ways of spelling ol’ Bill’s surname - indeed in the six surviving copies of his handwriting he spells it differently each time ( http://www.sheldoncomics.com/archive/070810.html )
Sadly I stumbled across one of the few typos which would land me in “definately wrong” territory - I’ve now fixed it.
DEFINITELY
Huh. That is an interesting tidbit of trivia. Thanks!
On another note, I love your comic, good sir. Keep up the good work!
The top frame was hilarious, but then I scrolled-down and it actually made sense.
Heh, I love the “see how things look at things from _this_ angle…” comics.
Denmark is AWESOME
you should have put performers and portrayers in the mere players circle
It’s things like this that make me wonder if I get out enough, just because I understood this.
Might there not be things in your philosophy which are neither in heaven nor in earth?
When I read panel two, I was actually thinking to myself, “doesn’t he know that’s a Euler diagram? I guess he only knows Venn diagrams from pop culture.” And then I read the title text, and I was relieved.
Isn’t three also an Euler diagram? Technically they all are, but still…