Myles Day Messages, Quotes and Sayings
This day celebrates the name Myles which the famous Irish writer Brian O’Nolan used in his writings. Share with everyone around on Facebook, WhatsApp and Instagram Happy Myles Day messages and wishes.

#batman#superman#bruce wayne#clark kent#dc fanart#superbat#superman 2025


#ao3#writeblr#ao3 fanfic#archive of our own#writing community


seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Estonia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Estonia
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Estonia

seen from Maldives
seen from Mexico
seen from China

seen from Canada

seen from United States
Myles Day Messages, Quotes and Sayings
This day celebrates the name Myles which the famous Irish writer Brian O’Nolan used in his writings. Share with everyone around on Facebook, WhatsApp and Instagram Happy Myles Day messages and wishes.
Myles Day Messages and Inspirational Quotes
This day celebrates the name Myles which the famous Irish writer Brian O’Nolan used in his writings. Share with everyone around on Facebook, WhatsApp and Instagram Happy Myles Day messages and wishes. The inspirational Myles Day quotes and sayings make a motivational share on this occasion.
de Selby’s possibly most interesting theory was that human existence is “a succession of static experiences each infinitely brief” (unattributed quote, TTP.4). From this he determined that any progression in life was impossible and insisted that time as commonly understood was not real. This is exemplified in his aphorism, “a journey is a hallucination” (quote attributed to Country Album, TTP.4). A trip from A to B is, per de Selby, in fact a series of infinitesimal pauses. Thus at no point is the “traveller” in motion. He points to the photograph as proof of this thesis. This was not merely theoretical; he is alleged to have put it into practice by travelling from Bath to Folkestone though the use of picture postcards of the supposed route, barometric instruments, clocks and a device to regulate gaslight to simulate sunlight at various “times” of day.
From de Selby: The Philosopher Preserved by Flann O'Brien on IrishPhilosophy.com