I've long been familiar with, and laughed at, the idiom "A blind man, in a dark room, looking for a black cat that isn't there". However, I wasn't aware of its origins, or of the various ways it's been used in the past. I decided, on a whim, to look it up.
Two articles at the always useful Quote Investigator provided the answers I needed. The first article established its origins.
The earliest evidence located by QI in a Missouri newspaper in 1846 did not mention any professions; instead, the figurative language was used to illustrate the notion of darkness. Boldface has been added to excerpts:
A DARK SUBJECT—A blind negro, with an extinguished candle looking for a black cat in a dark cellar.In August 1849 a London journal called “Family Herald: A Domestic Magazine of Useful Information and Amusement” printed a short item with an acknowledgement to another magazine called “Penny Punch”. The item presented a definition of darkness ascribed to a precocious child:
A DEFINITION OF DARKNESS
Dr. Twiggem—"Indeed, for his age, sir, he’s a wonderful child. Come now, Fred., my dear, give your papa a nice lucid definition of—of—darkness."
Fred. (after a little thought, and with much sagacity)—"Please, sir, ‘a blind Ethiopian—in a dark cellar—at midnight—looking for a black cat.' "
There's more at the link.
The second article provided a humorous look at the idiom's use in philosophical and theological debate - and in less-honest legal circles.
The earliest evidence located by QI appeared ... in a 1931 book titled “Since Calvary: An Interpretation of Christian History” by the comparative religion specialist Lewis Browne. The sharpest barb was aimed at a set of religious individuals called Gnostics:
Someone has said that a philosopher looking for the ultimate truth is like a blind man on a dark night searching in a subterranean cave for a black cat that is not there. Those Gnostics, however, were theologians rather than philosophers, and so—they found the cat!. . .
In 1942 the acerbic commentator H. L. Mencken published a prodigious collection of quotations that included a concise unattributed version of the gibe:
TheologyAlso in 1942 a book reviewer in the “Cornell Law Quarterly” extended the humorous passage by contrasting three professions: philosopher, theologian, and lawyer. This citation was listed in “The Oxford Dictionary of American Legal Quotations” and “Cassell’s Humorous Quotations”:
A blind man in a dark room searching for a black cat which isn’t there — and finding it.
Author unidentified
A philosopher is a blind man in a dark cellar at midnight looking for a black cat that isn’t there. He is distinguished from a theologian, in that the theologian finds the cat. He is also distinguished from a lawyer, who smuggles in a cat in his overcoat pocket, and emerges to produce it in triumph.
Again, more at the link.
Speaking as a once-upon-a-time theology student and now-retired pastor, I find the latter attributions very appropriate!
Peter
I like the last one!
ReplyDeleteA scientist will check for cat hair.
ReplyDeleteAn engineer will turn on the bloody light!
And if there is no light, the engineer will invent one.
ReplyDelete