|
Every once in a while, someone encounters
a unique confluence of mental and spiritual
clarity, linguistic alacrity, poetic
genius, and, often, devastating humor.
These are moments whose evidence should
be preserved.
My old friend, John Shipman, is very
good at doing just that, and I collected
(OK, stole) many of the quotations here
from his web site.
I welcome corrections. Although I'm
far more interested in the message than
the messenger or his exact choice of
words, I acknowledge that these, too,
are important. Also, just because you
see it here doesn't mean that I agree
with it. What it means is that I want
people to read these words by these
people, that's all.

Quick Contents
Quotations
"Quotations in my work are like
wayside robbers who leap out armed and
relieve the stroller of his conviction."
--
Walter Benjamin
"To be apt in quotation is a splendid
and dangerous gift. Splendid, because
it ornaments a man's speech with other
men's jewels; dangerous, for the same
reason." -- Robertson Davies
Wanna go back to
the table of contents?
Computers
"User-friendly, my ass."
-- Sally Breeden, commenting on the
IBM PC, October 28, 1983
"The most overlooked advantage
to owning a computer is that if they
foul up there's no law against whacking
them around a little." -- Owen
Porterfield, from the .sig of Mark Roedel
"Humility is the hallmark of the
experienced programmer." -- Brent
White; collected September 26, 1984
["Humility is the hallmark of the
experienced." -- DCB]
"Recursion is self-explanatory."
-- NMT graffiti, via Tom Sanderson
"The trouble with structured programming
is that your next job is in RPG."
-- Tom Sanderson, April 21, 1985
"A year spent in artificial intelligence
is enough to make one believe in God."
-- Derry Bryson
"The Net interprets censorship
as damage and routes around it."
-- John Gilmore
"The nice thing about standards
is that there are so many to choose
from." -- Anonymous
"In this country, everything loose
rolls to the West Coast." -- Thomas
A. Vanderslice, CEO of Apollo, in the
July 6, 1987 issue of the Wall Street
Journal (an article on the cultural
difference between freewheeling Sun
and straight-laced Apollo)
"ACHTUNG! ALLES LOOKENSPEEPERS!
Das computermachine ist nicht fuer gefingerpoken
und mittengrabben. Ist easy schnappen
der springenwerk, blowenfusen, und poppencorken
mit spitzensparken. Ist nicht fuer gewerken
bei das dumpkopfen. Das rubbernecken
sightseeren keepen das cotten-pickenen
hans in das pockets muss; relaxen und
watchen das blinkenlichten." --
from a sign posted in the Albuquerque
CEC, 1978... back in the days when the
computers really had blinking lights,
and you could really mess them up--blowing
fuses and watching sparks.
"To get job security, developers need
to position themselves as highly effective
business-value generators, working
with the rest of the company to solve
common goals. If you sit in your cube
waiting for a spec to be thrown over
the wall, then you may be in for a
wait -- that spec might be in an envelope
on its way to Bangalore." -- Dave Thomas,
2004. O'Reilly OnLamp.com: "The Pragmatic
Programmers Interview"
Wanna go back to
the table of contents?
Children
"Raising a teenager is like trying
to nail Jell-O to a tree." -- Sprite
Kiger
"There are many things that you're
not supposed to eat--especially children."
- - Mary Margaret McBride, radio personality
"When we adults think of children
there is a simple truth which we ignore:
childhood is not preparation for life.
Childhood is life. A child isn't getting
ready to live. A child is living.
"The child is constantly confronted
with the nagging question, 'What are
you going to be?' Courageous would be
the youngster who, looking the adult
squarely in the face, would say, 'I'm
not going to be anything; I already
am.' We adults would be shocked by such
an insolent remark, for we have forgotten,
if indeed we ever knew, that a child
is an active, participating, and contributing
member of society from the time he is
born.
"Childhood isn't a time when he
is molded into a human who will then
live life; he is a human who is living
life. No child will miss the zest and
joy of living unless these are denied
him by adults who have convinced themselves
that childhood is a period of preparation.
"How much heartache we would save
ourselves if we would recognize the
child as a partner with adults in the
process of living, rather than always
viewing him as an apprentice. How much
we would teach each other--adults with
the experience and children with the
freshness. How full both our lives could
be.
"A little child may not lead us,
but at least we ought to discuss the
trip with him, for, after all, life
is his and her journey, too."
-- John Taylor, Notes on an Unhurried
Journey
Science
"As an adolescent I aspired to
lasting fame, I craved factual certainty,
and I thirsted for a meaningful vision
of human life--so I became a scientist.
This is like becoming an archbishop
so you can meet girls." -- M. Cartmill
"Any sufficiently advanced technology
is indistinguishable from magic. "
-- Arthur C. Clarke
Wanna go back to
the table of contents?
Religion
"The common error of ordinary
religious practice is to mistake the
symbol for the reality, to look at the
finger pointing the way and then to
suck it for comfort rather than follow
it." -- Alan Watts, The Wisdom
of Insecurity, p. 23
"Thank God for secular humanism."
-- John F. Kennedy, according to Mort
Sahl
"One can't found a novel theology
on Nothing, and nothing is so secure
a foundation as a contradiction. Look
at the great successes of the past--they
say their deities are the masters of
all the universes, and yet that they
require grandmothers to defend them,
as if they were children frightened
by poultry. Or that the authority that
punishes no one while there exists a
chance for reformation will punish everyone
when there is no possibility anyone
will become the better for it."
-- Gene Wolfe, Shadow of the Torturer,
pp. 62--3
"Religion and science have always
been matters of faith in something.
It is the same something." -- Gene
Wolfe, Citadel of the Autarch, pp. 134--5
"God is a polytheist." --
UNIX fortune file
Wanna go back to
the table of contents?
The Past
"They just don't make 'em like
they used to. But, then again, they
never did." -- Greg Titus
"The only phrase I've ever disliked
is, `Why, we've always done it that
way.' I always tell young people, `Go
ahead and do it (another way). You can
always apologize later.'" -- Rear
Admiral Grace Murray Hopper, at her
retirement ceremony; Albuquerque Tribune,
August 15, 1986
Wanna go back to
the table of contents?
The Future
"To believe what has not occurred
in history will not occur at all, is
to argue disbelief in the dignity of
man." -- Mahatma Gandhi
"Doubt is vanquished by the act
of will which makes the decision. The
future becomes servant, not master."
-- James Burnham, in The Coming Defeat
of Communism
"Don't worry about the bullet
with your name on it. It hasn't been
made yet. The one to worry about says,
`To whom it may concern.'" -- J.
Paul Weaver
Wanna go back to
the table of contents?
Wisdom
To Live By
"Whoever fights monsters should
see to it that in the process he does
not become a monster. And when you look
long into an abyss, the abyss also looks
into you."
-- Friedrich Nietzsche, Beyond Good
and Evil
"Death is not extinguishing the
light; it is putting out the lamp because
dawn has come." -- Rabindranath
Tagore
"The nice thing about having your
body as your temple is, you get to worship
as you please." -- Greg Titus [May,
1984]
"It's not polite to talk with
your foot in your mouth." -- David
Northrop [May, 1984]
"If you're stuck in a painting,
then stop and draw something else. Draw
a flower and put your love into that
flower. Then your powers will come back
again." -- Pablo Picasso, "Parade,"
October 13, 1985
"Resolve to be always beginning--to
be a beginner!" -- Rainer Maria
Rilke
"An empty mind is a beginner's
mind." -- Dale Paulus
If you shut your door
To all errors,
Truth will be
Shut out.
-- Rabindranath Tagore
"Look it up--you'll remember it
longer; screw it up and you'll remember
it forever." -- from the .sig of
Dean Tudor
"All life is an experiment. The
more you experiment, the better."
-- Ralph Waldo Emerson
"No, no, NO! Make the move! Make
the move! Always risk defeat!!"
-- Michael Donahue [March, 1995], paraphrasing
a scene from Searching for Bobby Fisher
"You must be the change you wish
to see in the world" -- Mahatma
Gandhi
"You have to stop listening in
categories. The music is either good
or it's bad." -- Duke Ellington
"Woe to him who seeks to pour
oil on the waters when God has brewed
them into a gale! Woe to him who seeks
to please rather than to appall! Woe
to him whose good name is more to him
than goodness! Woe to him who, in this
world, courts not dishonor!" --
Melville, Moby Dick
"If you don't believe it's correct
before you start testing, what could
possibly convince you?" -- Don
Grimes, 1994
"You're a materialist, like all
ignorant people. But your materialism
doesn't make materialism true. Don't
you know that? In the final summing
up, it is spirit and dream, thought
and love and act that matter."
-- Gene Wolfe, ``Citadel of the Autarch,''
p. 81
I will not live an unlived life.
I will not live in fear
of falling or catching fire.
I choose to inhabit my days,
to allow my living to open me,
to make me less afraid, more accessible
to loosen my heart until it becomes
a wing, a torch, a promise.
I choose to risk my significance;
to live so that that which came
to me as seed goes
to the next as blossom,
and that which came to me as blossom
goes on as fruit.
--Markova
"Self-restraint is indulgence
of the propensity to forgo." --
Ambrose Bierce
"In the depths all becomes law."
-- Rainer Maria Rilke
The Road Less Traveled
Two roads diverged
in a wood, and I--
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made
all the difference.
-- Robert Frost
I would rather be ashes than dust.
I would rather my spark would burn out
in a brilliant blaze
than be stifled by dry-rot.
I would rather be a superb meteor,
every atom of me in magnificent glow,
than a sleepy and permanent planet.
The proper function of man is to live,
not to exist.
-- Jack London
There are two seas in Palestine.
One is fresh and fish live in it. Splashes
of green adorn its banks. Trees spread
their branches over it and stretch out
their thirsty roots to sip of its healing
water. Along its shores, children play
as children played when Jesus was there.
He loved it. He could look across its
silver surface when he spoke his parables,
and on a rolling plain not far away
he fed five thousand people.
The River Jordan makes this sea with
sparking water from the hills, so it
laughs in the sunshine, and men build
their houses near to it, and birds build
their nests. Every kind of life is happier
because it is there. The river Jordan
flows on south into another sea.
Here is no splash of fish, no fluttering
of leaf, no song of birds, no children's
laughter. Travelers choose another route.
The air hangs heavy above its water.
Neither man, beast nor fowl drink.
What makes this mighty difference in
neighboring seas? Not the River Jordan--it
empties the same good water into both;
not the soil in which they lie; not
the country round about.
This is the difference: the Sea of
Galilee receives but does not keep.
For every drop that flows into it, another
drop flows out. The giving and receiving
go on in equal measure. The other sea
is shrewder, hording its income jealously.
It will not be tempted into generous
impulse. Every drop it is given, it
keeps.
The Sea of Galilee gives and lives.
The other sea gives nothing. It is named
the Dead Sea.
There are two kinds of people in the
world. There are two seas in Palestine.
-- Unknown
Go to the people
Learn from them
Love them
Start with what they know
Build on what they have
But of the best leaders
When their task is accomplished
Their work is done
The people will remark:
"We have done it ourselves."
-- 2000 year-old Chinese poem
"Everybody can be great. Because
anybody can serve. You don't have to
have a college degree to serve. You
don't have to make your subject and
your verb agree to serve... You don't
have to know the second theory of thermo-dynamics
in physics to serve. You only need a
heart full of grace. A soul generated
by love." -- Martin Luther King,
Jr.
Excerpts from: The Key and the Name
of the Key is Willingness
Wanna go back to
the table of contents?
Caution!
"Naturally, the common people
don't want war; neither in Russia nor
in England nor in America, nor for that
matter in Germany. That is understood.
But, after all, it is the leaders of
the country who determine the policy
and it is always a simple matter to
drag the people along, whether it is
a democracy or a fascist dictatorship
or a Parliament or a Communist dictatorship.
"Voice or no voice, the people
can always be brought to the bidding
of the leaders. That is easy. All you
have to do is tell them they are being
attacked and denounce the pacifists
for lack of patriotism and exposing
the country to danger. It works the
same way in any country." -- Hermann
Goering, 1946
Personal
Development
"The man who, being really on
the Way, falls upon hard times in the
world will not, as a consequence, turn
to that friend who offers him refuge
and comfort and encourages his old self
to survive. Rather, he will seek out
someone who will faithfully and inexorably
help him to risk himself, so that he
may endure the suffering and pass courageously
through it, thus making of it a 'raft
that leads to the far shore.' Only to
the extent that man exposes himself
over and over again to annihilation,
can that which is indestructible arise
within him. In this lies the dignity
of daring. Thus, the aim of practice
is not to develop an attitude which
allows a man to acquire a state of harmony
and peace wherein nothing can ever trouble
him. On the contrary, practice should
teach him to let himself be assaulted,
perturbed, moved, insulted, broken and
battered--that is to say, it should
enable him to dare to let go his futile
hankering after harmony, surcease from
pain, and a comfortable life in order
that he may discover, in doing battle
with the forces that oppose him, that
which awaits him beyond the world of
opposites. The first necessity is that
we should have the courage to face life,
and to encounter all that is most perilous
in the world. When this is possible,
meditation itself becomes the means
by which we accept and welcome the demons
which arise from the unconscious--a
process very different from the practice
of concentration on some object as a
protection against such forces. Only
if we venture repeatedly through zones
of annihilation can our contact with
Divine Being, which is beyond annihilation,
become firm and stable. The more a man
learns whole-heartedly to confront the
world that threatens him with isolation,
the more are the depths of the Ground
of Being revealed and the possibilities
of new life and Becoming opened."
-- The Way of Transformation by Karlfried
Gras Von Dirkheim
"Security is mostly a superstition.
It does not exist in nature, nor do
the children of men as a whole experience
it. Avoiding danger is no safer in the
long run than outright exposure. Life
is either a daring adventure, or nothing."
-- Helen Keller
"The greatest wizard would be
the one who bewitched himself to the
point of accepting his own phantasmagorias
as autonomous apparitions. Wouldn't
that be our case?" -- Novalis
"A ship in port is safe, but that
is not what ships are for." --
Rear Admiral Grace Murray Hopper
"Don't resist the resistance."
-- Kathleen Welsh Luiten
"We shrink from change; yet is
there anything that can come into being
without it?" -- Marcus Aurelius
"There are as many strata at different
levels of life as there are leaves in
a book. When on the higher levels we
can remember the lower levels, but when
on the lower we cannot remember the
higher." -- Henry David Thoreau
"Ignorance and greed are part
of the evolutionary process, which is
just to say that mistakes are part of
learning. There is nothing bad about
behaviors or perceptions that do not
work; they simply have to be given up
and replaced by behaviors or perceptions
that do work." -- Buckminster Fuller
"A coach is someone who tells
you what you don't want to hear and
has you see what you don't want to see
so you can be who you have always known
you could be." -- Tom Landry
Wanna go back to
the table of contents?
Commitment
"The Roman Rule: The one who
says it cannot be done should never
interrupt the one who is doing it."
-- nmtvax fortune file
"Until one is committed
There is hesitancy, the chance to draw
back
Always ineffectiveness.
Concerning all acts of initiative (and
creation),
There is one elementary truth,
The ignorance of which kills countless
ideas
And splendid plans:
That the moment one definitely commits
oneself,
Then providence moves too.
All sorts of things occur to help one
That would never otherwise have occurred.
A whole stream of events issues from
the decision,
Raising in one's favour all manner
Of unforeseen incidents and meetings
And material assistance,
Which no man could have dreamt
Would have come his way.
I have learned a deep respect for one
of Goethe's couplets:
'Whatever you can do or dream you can,
begin it.
Boldness has genius, power and magic
in it.'"
-- W.H. Murray, The Scottish Himalayan
Expedition, J.M. Dent & Sons Ltd.,
1951
"Commitment is what transforms
a promise into reality.
It is the words that speak boldly of
your intentions.
And the actions which speak louder than
words.
It is making the time when there is
none.
Coming through time after time, year
after year after year.
Commitment is the stuff character is
made of;
the power to change the face of things.
It is the daily triumph of integrity
over skepticism.
'Life has no romance without risk'"
-- Sarah Doherty
Wanna go back to
the table of contents?
Integrity
Robert Anton Wilson: "What can
the average man or woman do to achieve
the total success of our species and
stave off the dangers we've mentioned?"
Buckminster Fuller: "Live with
integrity."
RAW: "Is that all?"
BF: "It is both necessary and sufficient."
"As I grow older, I pay less attention
to what men say. I just watch what they
do." -- Andrew Carnegie
"What you are, Sir, speaks so
loudly that I can't hear what you say."
-- Samuel Johnson
Wanna go back to
the table of contents?
Communication
"Two prisoners whose cells adjoin
communicate with each other by knocking
on the wall. The wall is the thing which
separates them but is also their means
of communication. It is the same with
us and God. Every separation is a link."
-- Simone Weil
"Transport of the mails, transport
of the human voice, transport of flickering
pictures--in this century as in others
our highest accomplishments still have
the single aim of bringing men together."
-- Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
Wanna go back
to the table of contents?
The
Nature of Reality
"If I don't manage to fly, someone
else will. The spirit wants only that
there be flying. As for who happens
to do it, in that he has only a passing
interest." -- Rainer Maria Rilke
"I am not what I think I can be.
I am not what you think I can be.
I am what I think you think I can be."
-- Anonymous
A good man was granted one wish by
God. The man said he would like to go
about doing good without knowing about
it. God granted his wish. And then God
decided that it was such a good idea,
he would grant that wish to all human
beings. And so it has been to this day.
-- Sufi story, according to Dale Paulus
"In a real sense all life is inter-related.
All men are caught in an inescapable
network of mutuality, tied in a single
garment of destiny. Whatever affects
one directly affects all indirectly....
I can never be what I ought to be until
you are what you ought to be, and you
can never be what you ought to be until
I am what I ought to be. This is the
inter-related structure of reality."
-- Martin Luther King, Jr.
"Physical concepts are free creations
of the human mind, and are not, however
it may seem, uniquely determined by
the external world. In our endeavor
to understand reality we are somewhat
like a man trying to understand the
mechanism of a closed watch. He sees
the face and the moving hands, even
hears its ticking, but he has no way
of opening the case. If he is ingenious
he may form some picture of a mechanism
which could be responsible for all the
things he observes, but he may never
be quite sure his picture is the only
one which could explain his observations.
He will never be able to compare his
picture with the real mechanism, and
he can not even imagine the possibility
or the meaning of such a comparison."
-- Albert Einstein, Evolution of Physics
[1938]
Wanna go back to
the table of contents?
Adventure
"The test of an adventure is
that when you're in the middle of it,
you say to yourself, 'Oh, now I've got
myself into an awful mess; I wish I
were sitting quietly at home.' And the
sign that something's wrong with you
is when you sit quietly at home wishing
you were out having lots of adventure."
-- Thornton Wilder
Wanna go back to
the table of contents?
Struggle
A man found a cocoon of the emperor
moth and took it home to watch it emerge.
One day a small opening appeared, and
for several hours the moth struggled
but couldn't seem to force its body
past a certain point.
Deciding something was wrong, the man
took scissors and snipped the remaining
bit of cocoon. The moth emerged easily,
its body large and swollen, the wings
small and shriveled.
He expected that in a few hours the
wings would spread out in their natural
beauty, but they did not. Instead of
developing into a creature free to fly,
the moth spent its life dragging around
a swollen body and shriveled wings.
The constricting cocoon and the struggle
necessary to pass through the tiny opening
are God's way of forcing fluid from
the body into the wings. The "merciful"
snip was, in reality, cruel. Sometimes
the struggle is exactly what we need.
-- Leadership, from "Quote"
magazine
Wanna go back to
the table of contents?
Success
"Success is a journey, not a
destination." -- Ben Sweetland
"If one advances confidently in
the direction of his dreams, and endeavors
to live the life which he has imagined,
he will meet with a success unexpected
in common hours." -- Henry David
Thoreau
"Self-trust is the first secret
of success." -- Ralph Waldo Emerson
"In anything at all, perfection
is finally attained, not when there
is no longer anything to add, but when
there is no longer anything to take
away." -- Antoine de Saint-Exupery,
"Wind, Sand And Stars," 1939.
Wanna go back to
the table of contents?
Freedom
"They that can give up essential
liberty to purchase a little temporary
safety deserve neither liberty or safety.
"
-- Benjamin Franklin
"Better a thousand-fold abuse
of free speech than denial of free speech.
The abuse dies in a day, but the denial
stays the life of the people, and entombs
the hope of the race." -- Charles
Bradlaugh, 19th-century British political
activist
Wanna go back to
the table of contents?
Reasonableness
and Unreasonableness
"The reasonable man adapts himself
to the conditions that surround him.
The unreasonable man adapts the surrounding
conditions to himself. All progress
depends on the unreasonable man."
-- George Bernard Shaw
Wanna go back to
the table of contents?
Oops!
"The Edsel is here to stay."
-- Henry Ford II, to Dealers [1957]
"What a giftless bastard!"
-- Tchaikovsky on Brahms [1886]
"No woman in my time will be prime
minister..." -- Margaret Thatcher
[1969]
"Everything that can be invented
has been invented." -- Charles
H. Duell, Commissioner, U.S. Offices
of Patents [1899]
"...a normal aberration."
-- Jack Herbein, spokesman at the nuclear
power plant on Three Mile Island [1979]
"I think there is a world market
for about five computers." -- Thomas
J. Watson, Chairman of the Board of
IBM [1943]
"Gentlemen, get the thing straight,
once and for all. The policeman isn't
there to create disorder. The policeman
is there to preserve disorder."
-- Mayor Richard Daily
"I stand by all of my misstatements."
-- Dan Quayle
Wanna go back to
the table of contents?
Miscellaneously
Humerous
"Cutting the space budget really
restores my faith in humanity. It eliminates
dreams, goals, and ideals and lets us
get straight to the business of hate,
debauchery, and self-annihilation."
-- Johnny Hart
"I'll take a drug test when Reagan
takes an IQ test." -- Dick Flanagan
"You can do more with a kind word
and a gun than with just a kind word."
-- Al Capone
"I thought that time was this
neat invention that kept everything
from happening at once. Why doesn't
this work in practice?" -- David
Herron
"You know it's going to be a bad
day when you can't find an open liquor
store on your way to work." --
Eric Robison, May 1994
"There's nothing like a good man
to confound a bad woman." -- Magail
Medina [May, 1984]
"You can't make a centipede by
gluing ants together." -- Greg
Titus [1985]
"Put out fires during the daytime.
Do your real work at night. Sleep is
just an addiction." -- Dieter Müller
"Fanaticism is redoubling your
efforts when you have lost sight of
your goal." -- George Santayana
"It would be a great day if the
schools got all the money they needed
and the military had to hold a bakesale"
-- anonymous
"The juvenile sea squirt wanders
through the sea searching for a suitable
rock or hunk of coral to cling to and
make its home for life. For this task
it has a rudimentary nervous system.
When it finds its spot and takes root,
it doesn't need its brain anymore so
it eats it.
It's rather like being elected to Congress."
-- from a posting on Young Scientists'
Network Digest by the Biology Dept.
at UW
Wanna go back to
the table of contents?
|