Astral Codex Ten Podcast feed 2024年07月17日
Initial Conditions
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文章探讨了人们使用姓名首字母缩写(如J.Q. Smith)的规律,发现以J开头的名字占据了绝大多数。作者通过个人观察、聚会讨论和Reddit论坛发现,这种现象可能与名字的常见度、发音的和谐性以及某些著名人物的引领有关。

📝 以J开头的名字(如JD, JT, JR等)在首字母缩写中占据主导地位,这可能是因为J名字太常见,人们需要通过缩写来区分。

🔍 JN、JL或JS这样的组合较少见,有人认为这些组合听起来不如JD和谐,但这种解释并不完全令人信服。

🤔 为什么M、C、A等字母没有同样的吸引力?例如,MD虽然听起来像医生,但JD听起来像律师,却很常见。

📚 可能是某些著名人物(如JD Salinger)的影响,使得这些首字母缩写变得正常,但CJ和AJ的出现又如何解释?

🔧 命名传统出奇地保守,首字母缩写的使用可能是多种因素的综合结果,包括发音的和谐性和文化传统。

https://astralcodexten.substack.com/p/initial-conditions

Consider people who go by their first and middle initials, eg John Q Smith introduces himself as “Hi, I’m J.Q.” Authors who use their initials on their books (eg J.K. Rowling) don’t count, unless they also go by their initials in everyday life.

Is there any pattern to who does this - ie which initials lead people to initialize their names? Think about this for a second before you continue:

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In my experience it’s about 50% JD, 49% a few other names involving J (JT, JR, AJ, CJ, RJ, etc) and 1% anything else. I discussed this with some people at the last meetup, who also felt this way. I was also able to find a Reddit thread of people with the same observation. What’s going on?

At the meetup, some people theorized that J names (eg John, Jack, etc) are so common that their holders need to differentiate themselves; instead of being the tenth John in your class, you go by JD or JT. But then how come there are so few JNs, JLs, or JS’s? Some people at the meetup thought those combinations sounded less melodious than “JD”, but I’m not really feeling it. Also, in my birth year, the three most popular male names were Michael, Christopher, and Matthew. How come "M" doesn't have the same initializing allure? How come I don’t know anyone who goes by MD?

(sure, MD would be weird because it sounds like a doctor, but then JD should be weird because it sounds like a lawyer!)

Other people thought it might have something to do with J itself being a name (ie Jay). But Em, Bee, Dee, and Kay are all girls’ names, and none of them end up as common initials.

Might some famous person (JD Salinger?) have started it, and then everyone thought it was okay and normal for those initials only? But then why all the CJs and AJs? There definitely seems to be a J-related pattern here.

Maybe there’s something linguistically satisfying about JD and CJ that seemingly similar sounds like KP and DA don’t have. But it doesn’t sound that way. And lots of initials (eg PC, LA, etc), get used in common speech, in a way that suggests we’re not having any trouble producing them.

My guess is that it’s a weird combination of all these things, plus naming traditions being surprisingly conservative. But I’d be interested to hear from any JDs (or other initial names) reading this: why did you decide to initialize (or not initialize) yourself?

(in my case, it’s because my initials are SA and I’m an essayist - it would just be weird!)

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姓名缩写 文化现象 社会心理学
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