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* Some believe that ] is an artistic movement. In fact, nearly every primary source, from the inception of surrealism to the present day, either directly or indirectly contradicts this, and a great many explicitly state that surrealism is not an artistic movement. Initially it was debated within surrealism whether there could even be such a thing as surrealist painting. * Some believe that ] is an artistic movement. In fact, nearly every primary source, from the inception of surrealism to the present day, either directly or indirectly contradicts this, and a great many explicitly state that surrealism is not an artistic movement. Initially it was debated within surrealism whether there could even be such a thing as surrealist painting.


See also: ] (ridiculous misconceptions), ] == See also ==
* ] (wild misconceptions)
* ]


== External links == == External links ==

Revision as of 16:48, 6 March 2004

This is a list of common, uncontroversial, and undisputed misconceptions.

List of misconceptions

  • Some believe that the ship Mary Celeste was called Marie Celeste. In fact Marie Celeste was the spelling used by Arthur Conan Doyle in a story based on the incident.
  • Some believe that the famous line "play it again Sam" was spoken in Casablanca. In fact, the line in question is: "You played it for her, you can play it for me. Play it!".
  • Some believe that Christopher Columbus had a hard time receiving support because Europeans believed in a flat Earth. In fact, sailors and navigators of the time knew that the Earth was spherical, but (correctly) disagreed with Colombus's estimates of the distance to the Indies.
  • Some believe that surrealism is an artistic movement. In fact, nearly every primary source, from the inception of surrealism to the present day, either directly or indirectly contradicts this, and a great many explicitly state that surrealism is not an artistic movement. Initially it was debated within surrealism whether there could even be such a thing as surrealist painting.

See also

External links