"There are still sporadic outbursts of protest, and now and then
some
zealot will seize an old weapon discarded in the fray and deal the
astonished
world a blow on the pate with it. He is not always sure of the
issue
involved, or of the original purpose of the weapon, but it has a
convenient
handle and makes a loud thwack, and that is enough for him."
Bergen
Evans, _The Natural History of Nonsense_
"Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it whether it
exists or not, diagnosing it incorrectly, and applying the wrong
remedy."
Ernest Benn
"Failure is not an option. It's bundled with your software."
"Ask a scientist what he conceives the scientific method to be and
he will adopt an expression that is at once solemn and shifty-eyed:
solemn,
because he feels he ought to declare an opinion; shifty-eyed because he
is wondering how to conceal the fact that he has no opinion to
declare."
Sir Peter Medawar, quoted in Shermer (1997).
"I think college administrators should encourage students to urinate
on walls and bushes, because then when students from another college
come
sniffing around, they'll know this is someone else's territory."
Jack Handy.
"Ignorance and fanaticism are ever busy, indeed feeding, always feeding
and gloating for more." Clarence Darrow.
"There can't be many people in the world that can blow wind like your average psychologists." Caleb Carr, The Angel of Darkness (talking about writing).
"Are you so unobservant as not to have found out that sanity and
happiness
are an impossible combination? No sane man can be happy, for to
him
life is real, and he sees what a fearful thing it is." Mark
Twain,
The Mysterious Stranger.
"The lecture was to be given tomorrow, and it was now almost
eight-thirty.
As a lecturer, Dr. Talc was known for the facile and sarcastic wit and
easily digested generalizations that...helped to conceal his lack of
knowledge
about almost everything in general and British history in
particular.
But even Talc realized that his reputation for sophistication and
glibness
would not save him in the face of his being unable to remember
absolutely
anything about Lear and Arthur aside from the fact that the former had
some children." John Kennedy Toole, A Confederacy of Dunces.
"And what about these guys who say to you, 'Are they keepin' ya
busy?'
I happen to resent even the assumption that there are people who have
the
authority to keep me busy." George Carlin.
"Though no man can draw a stroke between the confines of day and night,
yet light and darkness are upon the whole tolerably
distinguishable."
Edmund Burke.
"Mobius, I have no doubt, did his best from his special and limited
point of view; but it was a crime which science should not readily
pardon
or forget, on the part of editors of the German periodical, to publish
and illustrate as scientific material a paper which was so very far
from
being either fair or adequate." J. William Dawson.
"Psychology, or at least American psychology, is a second rate
discipline.
The main reason is that it does not stand in awe of its subject
matter.
Psychologists have too little respect for psychology." James J.
Gibson.
"I know that I feel a flashing genetic kinship with my father on the
rare occasions when I break into a run, an exact imitation of the
awkward,
arm-flapping, change-jingling trot that passed for running when he was
in a hurry." Neil Steinberg.
"There is a pleasing excitement in having to lecture tomorrow on a
period of history which I have not heard of till today. . . .
Thus
far the only merit of my instruction has been its originality, one
hundred
youths at any rate have learned facts and theories for which in after
life
they will hunt the authorities in vain, unless, as I trust, they forget
all they have been told." Henry Adams on teaching history with a
high course load. (Quoted in Legends, Lies, and Cherished
Myths
of American History, Richard Shenkman.)
"A conservative is one who wants the rules enforced so no one can take
his pile the way he got it."
"Suffering severe delusions of adequacy, Mr. Spock groped melodies
as effortlessly as someone trying to pick up dimes with a catcher's
mitt."
The compilation album Golden Throats 2 on Leonard Nimoy's
recording
career spanning 10 albums (unfortunately, the web site that sampled
Spock's
career in music is no more).
"For a long while our normality struck me as tragic, the withering
of wondrous flowers that should have been allowed to bloom. But
that
was youthful ego. Now I see we were assuming our rightful spot in
the great slurry of ordinary people, most of whom seem to want--at
least
at some point--to do some fabulous thing with their lives, to be
glittering
and special, only to eventually abandon their dreams and go on to
mundane
existences." Neil Steinberg, Complete and Utter Failure.
"When I turned two I was really anxious, because I'd doubled my age
in a year. I thought, if this keeps up, by the time I'm six I'll
be ninety." Steven Wright
"'Angelo's got him a hard road to travel,' Mrs. Reilly said
absently.
She was thinking of the PEACE TO MEN OF GOOD WILL sign that Ignatius
had
tacked to the front of their house after he had come home from
work...
'What you think about somebody wants peace, Claude?' 'That sounds
like a communiss to me.'" from A Confederacy of Dunces,
John
Kennedy Toole.
"If you read trendy intellectual magazines, you may have noticed that
'reductionism' is one of those things, like sin, that is only mentioned
by people who are against it." Richard Dawkins, The Blind
Watchmaker.
"I'm all for Lawrence Welk. Lawrence Welk is a wonderful
man.
He used to be, or was, or--wherever he is now, bless him." George
Bush.
"Moral indignation is in most cases 2% moral, 48% indignation, and
50% envy." Vittorio de Sica.
Long-distance dependency: "How Ann Salisbury can claim that Pam
Dawber's anger at not receiving her fair share of acclaim for Mork and
Mindy's success derives from a fragile ego escapes me." Pinker,
1994.
Speech production: "For seven and a half years I've worked
alongside
President Reagan. We've had triumphs. Made some
mistakes.
We've had some sex...uh...setbacks." George Bush (McWilliams,
1996).
"Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre
minds." Albert Einstein.
"Until you've lost your reputation, you never realize what a burden
it was or what freedom really is." Margaret Mitchell (McWilliams,
1996).
"It is not only vain, but wicked, in a legislator to frame laws in
opposition to the laws of nature, and to arm them with the terrors of
death.
This is truly creating crimes in order to punish them." Thomas
Jefferson.
"Sometimes at the end of the day when I'm smiling and shaking hands,
I want to kick them." Richard Nixon.
"If we were to think of the philosophy of mind over the past fifty
years as a single individual, we would say of that person that he is a
compulsive neurotic, and his neurosis takes the form of repeating the
same
pattern of behavior over and over." John R. Searle
"This constant reinterpretation of the meaning of victory, coupled
with the utter disregard for the definition of the words being spelled,
except as orthographic aids, reinforces my view of the bee as a
near-Orwellian
mockery of the idea that words convey meaning. It is like a
contest
where people hold books at arm's length and try to guess their
weight."
Neil Steinberg on the National Spelling Bee.
"I am skeptical that a society that is so tolerant of alcohol and
cigarettes
should come down so hard on marijuana use and send people to prison for
life without parole... We should not repeal all the drug laws
overnight,
but we should begin with marijuana and see whether the sky
falls."
Chief Judge Richard Posner, U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals.
"...I confess with all the humility I can muster that the kind of
learning
you've described is the better--if a comparison is possible. It's
the ideal every college teacher glimpses now and then when he looks up
from the dance of death in which he has been caught." B.F.
Skinner,
Walden Two.
"'What do we really know about those conditions?' I said, a little
out of countenance at being called a philosopher." B.F. Skinner,
Walden Two.
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