Great Quotes III: Source and Context are Key

Status
Not open for further replies.
Now why didn't I think of tapping Civ games for quotes?

Oh, is Bacon quoted in a Civ game.? Well, then I wouldn't have mentioned it to a group who would have encountered it there.

Still, truer to a lifetime of reading than the silly Taleb strictures.

They sound like the kind of thing a guy would say who'd Never read a book
 
Sounds more like this guy is just sad other journalists get far royalty checks from their published books while he just gets letters saying things like "Please stop sending us your attempts at manuscripts".

Are you thinking of someone else or just making stuff up? Taleb is huge.

Oh, is Bacon quoted in a Civ game.? Well, then I wouldn't have mentioned it to a group who would have encountered it there.

It's Civ4 literature tech. I can't even tell you how many times I've heard it. I can still hear Sean Bean (or whoever) echoing away in my brain.

Still, truer to a lifetime of reading than the silly Taleb strictures.

Bacon did not live in the 'information' age.
 
Last edited:
Sean Bean?? He sounds nothing like Leonard Nimoy!
 
Are you thinking of someone else or just making stuff up? Taleb is huge.



It's Civ4 literature tech. I can't even tell you how many times I've heard it; I can still hear the echo of Sean Bean (or whoever) in my brain.



Bacon did not live in the 'information' age.

Taleb?
Probably almost no one here would have heard of him, so isn't that again an exaggeration - much like his own quotes? ^^
 
I've never heard of him, but apparently he's a Lebanese-American statistician and essayist, which certainly explains why.
 
Kevin Bacon was quoted in a Civ IV?
 
Risk management is indeed a brilliant concept.
"The inherent vice of capitalism is the unequal sharing of blessings. The inherent virtue of Socialism is the equal sharing of miseries."
-1945-10-22 speech to House of Commons, Winston Churchill
 
I doubt I'd reread a dull or plodding book even if the ending were spectacular.
I don't get the impression that Taleb imagines reading is supposed to be fun, else he probably wouldn't have felt the need to come up with a list of rules for it.
 
Nah, constant exposure to journalistic and academic BS will do that to you. Look at what he writes in The Black Swan:
For Yevgenia Krasnova, a person could love one book, at most a few— beyond this was a form of promiscuity. Those who talk about books as commodities are inauthentic, just as those who collect acquaintances can be superficial in their friendships. A novel you like resembles a friend. You read it and reread it, getting to know it better. Like a friend, you accept it the way it is; you do not judge it. Montaigne was asked "why" he and the writer Etienne de la Boétie were friends—the kind of question people ask you at a cocktail party as if you knew the answer, or as if there were an answer to know. It was typical of Montaigne to reply, "Parce que c'était lui, parce que c'était moi" (because it was him and because it was me). Likewise, Yevgenia claims that she likes that one book "because it is it and be cause I am me." Yevgenia once even walked out on a schoolteacher because he analyzed that book and thus violated her rule. One does not sit idle listening as people wax analytical about your friends. A very stubborn schoolchild she was.
 
There's more in that that's true of a life with books than there is in the list of "Never"s. I could get behind this for instance: "Those who talk about books as commodities are inauthentic"

But since Montaigne is referenced, Montaigne's library had at least a thousand books.

One can love more books than Krasnova managed to.
 
There's more in that that's true of a life with books than there is in the list of "Never"s. I could get behind this for instance: "Those who talk about books as commodities are inauthentic"

But since Montaigne is referenced, Montaigne's library had at least a thousand books.

One can love more books than Krasnova managed to.

Isn't Montaigne the one who said "my subject of study is my own self"?
 
Yep, but he met himself in other people's books.
 
Trump, in the crinkling of an eye, senses better than anyone the insecurity of people, that nobody knows whether anything is good or bad until they are told, and he is quite willing to tell them immediately. His instinct appears to tell him that people crumble quickly at the first show of bravado, particularly members of the media, which is the plural of mediocre. Trump cannot be blamed for taking advantage of people who love to be victims of press agentry. He will tell the shoe-shine boys of the press that he plans to have his Eastern Airlines shuttle fly into space, and they will treat it as exciting news. As far as getting publicity whenever he wants it, Trump is the white Al Sharpton.



Jimmy Breslin; published in Newsday on October 13, 1988.
 
Last edited:
That would imply that Trump had previously done good work, and had only later become a self-serving careerist.
 
"Is a form of nihilism innate in a portion of humanity? To some, every authority figure an oppressor, every transaction a swindle." -Daniel Hannan
 
"Is a form of nihilism innate in a portion of humanity? To some, every authority figure an oppressor, every transaction a swindle." -Daniel Hannan

That isn't nihilism. For the same reason that throwing the garbage out does not signify a form of mania to get rid of stuff.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top Bottom