Dept. of Nominative Determinism

More on whether a name is destiny: “There was a lot of buzz online a couple months back when an article entitled ‘Moniker Maladies’ made what seemed to many to be a startling claim: Baseball players strike out more often when their names start with ‘K’; Students with the initials ‘C’ and ‘D’ get worse grades than others.

Actually, this effect, known as the ‘name-letter effect,’ has been known for several years. If your name — even your last name — starts with T, you’re more likely to live in Tacoma or Tulsa than San Francisco or Springfield…” (Cognitive Daily)

This is just another example of correlation not being causation. A certain number of correlations will occur by chance. I am more interested in another sort of nominative determinism — anecdotal cases of people’s names being suited to their roles in life. This was popularized by New Scientist in its back pages. The best case of this I ever ran across personally was when I went to a psychiatric conference concerning violence, whose three keynote speakers were Schouten, Swearingen and Blood. Honest.

Tonkin-Hormuz Syndrome

Iran showdown has echoes of faked Tonkin attack: “A dramatic showdown at sea. Crossed communication signals. Apparently-hostile craft nearby. Sketchy intelligence leading to ratcheted up rhetoric.

The similarities between this week’s confrontation between US warships and Iranian speedboats and events off the coast of North Vietnam 44 years ago were too hard for many experts to miss, leading to the question: Is the Strait of Hormuz 2008’s Gulf of Tonkin?” (Raw Story)

Could Congress possibly be as gullible again?