Even people who aren't geniuses can outthink the rest of mankind if they develop certain thinking habits.
Charles Darwin
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@synecdochesmaylie
Even people who aren't geniuses can outthink the rest of mankind if they develop certain thinking habits.
Charles Darwin
Know the rules well, so you can break them effectively.
Dalai Lama XIV
Everything popular is wrong.
Oscar Wilde
Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away.
Antoine de Saint-Exupery
⊠beliefs and desires are information, incarnated as configurations of symbols. The symbols are the physical states of bits of matter, like chips in a computer or neurons in the brain. They symbolize things in the world because they are triggered by those things via our sense organs, and because of what they do once they are triggered. If the bits of matter that constitute a symbol are arranged to bump into the bits of matter constituting another symbol in just the right way, the symbols corresponding to one belief can give rise to new symbols corresponding to another belief logically related to it, which can give rise to symbols corresponding to other beliefs, and so on⊠. The computational theory of mind thus allows us to keep beliefs and desires in our explanations of behavior while planting them squarely in the physical universe. It allows meaning to cause and be caused.
Steven Pinker on CTM (the computational theory of Mind)
I love fools' experiments. I'm always making them.
Charles Darwin
Does history record any case in which the majority was right?
Robert Heinlein
Never mistake a wish for a certainty.
The Dowager Countess, Downton Abbey
In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, writers offered the real thing; that was their task. In War and Peace Tolstoy describes the battleground so closely that the readers believe itâs the real thing. But I donât. Iâm not pretending itâs the real thing. We are living in a fake world; we are watching fake evening news. We are fighting a fake war. Our government is fake. But we find reality in this fake world. So our stories are the same; we are walking through fake scenes, but ourselves, as we walk through these scenes, are real. The situation is real, in the sense that itâs a commitment, itâs a true relationship. Thatâs what I want to write about.
Haruki Murakami
[via avidamodernaeumlixo]
(via nodalpoint)
Happiness in this world, when it comes, comes incidentally. Make it the object of pursuit, and it leads us a wild-goose chase, and is never attained. Follow some other object, and very possibly we may find that we have caught happiness without dreaming of it.
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Bitterness is anger that forgot where it came from.
Alain de Botton
Most of the biosphere cannot see the infosphere; it is invisible, a parallel universe humming with ghostly inhabitants. But they are not ghosts to us - not anymore. We humans, alone among the earth's organic creatures, live in both worlds at once. It is as though, having long coexisted with the unseen, we have begun to develop the needed extrasensory perception. We are aware of the many species of information. We name their types sardonically, as though to reassure ourselves that we understand: urban myths and zombie lies. We keep them alive in air-conditioned server farms. But we cannot own them. When a jingle lingers in our ears, or a fad turns fashion upside down, or a hoax dominates the global chatter for months and vanishes as swiftly as it came, who is master and who is slave?
James Gleick, "The Information"
The strange and beautiful truth about the adjacent possible is that its boundaries grow as you explore them. Each new combination opens up the possibility of other new combinations. Think of it as a house that magically expands with each door you open. You begin in a room with four doors, each leading to a new room that you havenât visited yet. Once you open one of those doors and stroll into that room, three new doors appear, each leading to a brand-new room that you couldnât have reached from your original starting point. Keep opening new doors and eventually youâll have built a palace.
The Genius of the Tinkerer (article) by Steven Johnson (via webisteme)
Signs and symbols were not just placeholders; they were operators, like the gears and levers in a machine. Language, after all, is an instrument.
James Gleick, "The Information"
"A man who's never gone to school may steal from a freight car; but if he has an education he may steal the whole railroad."
- Roosevelt
The critic will certainly be an interpreter, but he will not treat Art as a riddling Sphinx, whose shallow secret may be guessed and revealed by one whose feet are wounded and who knows not his name. Rather, he will look upon Art as a goddess whose mystery it is his province to intensify, and whose majesty his privilege to make more marvellous in the eyes of men.
Oscar Wilde, âThe Artist as Criticâ (via airasothis)