
New Puzzler, 5/5/97: Historical Roots of Anti-Leftism
RAY: Gee. OK, it's time for the puzzler.
TOM: Really?
RAY: I was reading something the other day where I
discovered that Leonardo da Vinci was left-handed but wrote backwards. He
wrote from the right side of the page to the left side of the page and he
didn't write the way you would write, he wrote what was called mirror
writing. He actually wrote backwards so you would need a mirror to read
this. And I said, huh, that's kind of interesting. I wonder why he did
that? And I remember when we were kids, well, no when I was a kid. When
you were a kid in school they were still pressing reeds into clay tablets
to write. Cuneiform writing. Remember that?
TOM:Stones and hammers.
RAY: But when I was a kid in school, every kid that was
left-handed was forced -- those were the days when you could hit kids. You
can't hit kids any more, but every kid that was left-handed was forced to
write right-handed almost without exception.
TOM: Yeah.
RAY: It's hardly ever done now.
TOM: Yeah.
RAY: Back then there was a very good reason for it.
TOM: A practical reason, not a psychological one.
RAY: Not a psychological one. There was a practical
reason for it, which, for the most part, does not exist today. What was
that reason?
TOM: Oh!
RAY: And if you think you know the answer, send it to --
TOM: I like this.
[ Car Talk Puzzler ]