Tuesday, April 9, 2013

A copywriter's blind spot, or mine?

I'm about to have a bit of eye surgery, and I don't want to scare the grandchildren, so I picked up a fetching eyepatch to conceal any colorful aftereffects. (The kids should be fine with the pirate look, since they're big fans of Jake and the Never Land Pirates, a Disney updating that ignores poor old Peter Pan.)

But check out the description: "Shaped for comfort and protection. Concave shape minimizes pressure." Doesn't "concave" mean depressed, curving inward? And wouldn't a concave eyepatch give the wearer a poke in the eye?

I opened the box and found a satiny black Captain Hook/Hathaway Shirt-guy patch. And is it concave or convex? Trick question. It's aimed outward at the world in a perky point, like a junior Madonna's bra cup; I'd call that convex, reflecting the point of view of everyone who will see it in use. But it's also concave, if you're looking at the inner surface rather than the outer.

I can see how it's fair to call it concave, since concavity is what matters to the eye it's protecting. But it would never have occurred to me to describe this item -- pictured on the box from its convex side, visible in use only from its convex side -- as concave. The word "concave" is only accurate from one point of (non)view -- that of the eye that's hidden in protected darkness. Even when that's my eye, I don't think I'm going to see it that way.

16 comments:

Bryan White said...

Hmm, I'm wondering what the point of the... point is. You'd think that they would just make it out of soft, semi-flexible, material that molds around the contours of your brow.

Sean said...

I would say that it's simply curved, as the two surfaces are parallel. If it were a solid cube, for instance, with one side curving inwards or outwards then I'd say that surface was concave or convex, respectively.

jhm said...

This argument relies on the assumption that the difference between the inside and the outside of the patch is ambiguous; I don't know if the thing is reversible, but this is the only way that that could be true.

John Cowan said...

"Minimizes pressure", it says. On what? On the eye. So it's the eye's-eye-view that counts. "Concave" it is.

Kay L. Davies said...

I agree with John re the eye's eye view.
But an interesting discussion is being had by all, which is the best part of the whole thing, n'est-ce pas?
K

The Ridger, FCD said...

I would imagine the point of the point is that it will stiffen the patch, making it less likely to collapse onto the eye if you walk into something (with your lack of depth perception!).

empty said...

I agree with John Cowan.

But I have to add that there is a history of ambiguity in the mathematical use of the word "convex", to the point where some calculus books try to cut through the ambiguity by distinguishing between "concave up" and "concave down". You might think that one of these should be called "convex" and the other "concave", and you'd be sort of right but sort of wrong ...

Gregory Lee said...

The usage of "convex" in math that I'm familiar is that every point between two points of a convex body is also within the body. In that sense, the eye patch would not be convex. I don't think non-convex things are called concave, though, because there is such a variety of ways that a body could fail to be convex -- think of a sphere covered by small pits.

empty said...

I agree with you, Greg, as far as convex bodies go, but there is the related mathematical usage "convex functions".

It is standard practice to call a function convex if the set of points above its graph is convex, for example if its second derivative is positive. This is a useful bit of shorthand for those who do research in mathematical analysis. The convention could just as well be that a function is convex if the second derivative is negative. (Think of the points below the graph instead of the points above.) I think that writers of calculus textbooks for a time used "concave" for the latter notion. But now they've switched to calling the latter "concave down" and the former (the experts' "convex") "concave up", and leaving the word "convex" out of it entirely.

Bryan White said...

Miriam-Webster's online diction defines "convex" as:

curved or rounded outward like the exterior of a sphere or circle

Seems simple enough. I don't know if we need to drag calculus into the discussion.

empty said...

I don't want to be unduly argumentative. I just wanted to clarify to Greg my point about there being some ambiguity in the convex/concave antithesis.

But setting aside functions and getting back to three-dimensional objects, isn't there still some ambiguity? An object can be "rounded outward" on one side but not the other. You might say that the eyeball side of the eye patch is disqualified, because the dictionary definition says "outward", but dictionary dictionaries aren't everything. Whoever wrote that definition was not, presumably, thinking specifically of an object that has an "outer" side and an "inner" side".

Gregory Lee said...

The ad said: Concave shape minimizes pressure. It means pressure against the eyeball, so it's the part of the patch that contacts the eyeball that is relevant, and that should be concave, to minimize pressure. If it were instead convex, that would maximize pressure. The part of the patch facing outward when it is worn is not relevant.

I hope Jan's eye surgery doesn't result in any unplanned concavities.

Gregory Lee said...

I should note that I'm agreeing with John Cowan, here.

empty said...

Me, too, although I do think the copy on the package is badly written.

nycguy said...

Isn't there a limerick ending:
"concave or convex
it fits either sex
and is perfectly easy to clean."

Maybe it inspired your eyepatch people.

Gordon said...

This ad for a "convex" eye patch touts it's unique "concave" shape. http://www.colonialmedical.com/convex-eye-patch-P-843.html