Saturday, August 15, 2020
Water Pennies
— J. Reese Voshell Jr, Freshwater Invertebrates*
Friday, August 14, 2020
In the tantalizing examples of Britain and the United States, classical liberal orders were institutionalized long before the dawn of mass politics.
— Stephen Kotkin, Stalin: Volume 1: Paradoxes of Power
Thursday, August 13, 2020
Every building is a building for ants.
— @dank.lloyd.wright
Wednesday, August 12, 2020
What we designate modernity was not something natural or automatic. It involved a set of difficult-to-attain attributes—mass production, mass culture, mass politics—that the greatest powers mustered. Those states, in turn, forced other countries to attain modernity as well, or suffer the consequences, inlcuding defeat in war and possible colonial conquest.
— Stephen Kotkin, Stalin: Volume 1: Paradoxes of Power
Tuesday, August 11, 2020
We can't confuse something that's universal with something that's natural.
— Ed Hundert on Müller-Lyer illusion and Zulus
Monday, August 10, 2020
"When a mouse observes," Einstein asked them, "does that change the state of the universe?"
— Walter Isaacson, Einstein
Sunday, August 9, 2020
I was surprised at the gesture, hokey or not, at the mass participation in it. Most of all, I was surprised at my response to it; I felt genuinely welcomed.
— Audre Lorde, "Notes from a Trip to Russia," Sister Outsider
Saturday, August 8, 2020
Liked each other, understood each other, and perhaps more important (for she, too, was actualy quite clever in her own way) were amused by each other.
— Walter Isaacson, Einstein
Friday, August 7, 2020
Currently eating hen house donuts, turkey bacon and straberries cut in half.
— David in a text to "Ben's Basement"
Thursday, August 6, 2020
Wow, let's make a book with stuff that could feed people suffering from hunger and that's made of cadavers. That's gonna be so culturally valuable.
The basic ideas of atypical material I am like : why not. But come on making books with materials which required killing animals and which were there to feed ppl... Please. Life has stakes.
I really don't buy into this sorry.
— Unicorns United!, YouTube comment on "Make a Book with Meat (or other atypical materials) ft. Ben Denzer," The Art Assignment
Wednesday, August 5, 2020
One reason that Einstein... became such an icon was because he looked the part and because he could, and would, play the role.
— Walter Isaacson, Einstein
Tuesday, August 4, 2020
Years later, when his younger son, Eduard, asked why he was so famous, Einstein replied by using a simple image to describe his great insight that gravity was the curving of the fabric of spacetime. "When a blind beetle crawls over the surface of a curved branch, it doesn't notice that the track it has covered is indeed curved," he said. "I was lucky enough to notice what the beetle didn't notice."
— Walter Isaacson, Einstein
Monday, August 3, 2020
It's so funny to hear you say "bookmaking" because I grew up with that term.
— Sid
Sunday, August 2, 2020
Herbert Bayer, died the year I was born.
— Sara Cwynar, "Modern Art in your Life Part 1," MoMA
Saturday, August 1, 2020
His lectures tended to be regarded as disorganized until his celebrity ensured that every stumble he made was transformed into a charming anecdote.
— Walter Isaacson, Einstein
Friday, July 31, 2020
By the way, in passing, it is interesting to note that all results essentially dependent on the fusion of subject and object have been limitative results.
— Douglas Hofstadter, Gödel, Escher, Bach
Thursday, July 30, 2020
The amazing thing about language is how imprecisely we use it and still manage to get away with it.
— Douglas Hofstadter, Gödel, Escher, Bach
Wednesday, July 29, 2020
"At a very early age, I made an assumption that a successful physicist only needs to know elementary mathematics," he said. "At a later time, with great regret, I realized that the assumption of mine was completely wrong"
— Walter Isaacson, Einstein
Tuesday, July 28, 2020
Even if a brain is, in a technical and abstract sense, some sort of formal system, it remains true that mathematicians only work with simple and elegant systems, systems in which everythign is extremely cearly defined—and the brain is a far cry from that, with its ten billion or more semi-independent neurons, quasi-randomly connected up to each other. So mathematicians would never study a real brain's networks. And if you define "mathematics" as what mathematicians enjoy doing, then the properties of brains are not mathematical.
— Douglas Hofstadter, Gödel, Escher, Bach
Monday, July 27, 2020
A stamp that made it recognizably his, the way a Picasso is recognizably a Picasso.
— Walter Isaacson, Einstein