Diamond Enthusiast

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If you really want to get confused about this issue, methos, then do this: look up the term boustrophedon in the dictionary and in an encyclopedia or two. The earliest available inscriptions in Linear B, recording a form of Greek, were written in both directions at once!
The direction of writing in space is entirely arbitrary. All writing systems, even the Chinese, are attempts to imitate what is essentially a spoken medium. Now tell me this: does a stream of sound proceed from left to right, or the reverse? Before you answer that earlier times are, of course, to the left of later ones, please consider that this practice, too, in representing a Cartesian coordinate system, is entirely arbitrary, much later than the general practice in Western Europe of writing language down from left to right, and in fact determined by that practice itself.
The left-to-right practice is far more frequent than the reverse, owing to the vast influence of Greek and Roman writing systems on languages throughout the world. Ironically enough, the precursors of the Greek writing, though, went from right to left, as in modern Hebrew and Arabic. And of course in Chinese calligraphy the characters often go from the top down, just to make matters worse!
[This message was edited by maiku on 06-14-03 at 08:34 PM.]
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