“55: LISP programmers know the value of everything and the cost of nothing.”
Alan Perlis Epigrams on Programming
Epigrams on Programming, 1982
“55: LISP programmers know the value of everything and the cost of nothing.”
Alan Perlis Epigrams on Programming
Epigrams on Programming, 1982
“It is past all controversy that what costs dearest is, and ought to be, most valued.”
Miguel de Cervantes (1547–1616) Spanish novelist, poet, and playwright
Chap 11.
Don Quixote de la Mancha (1605–1615), Part I, Book IV
“Nothing is without cost. There is a price to all power, and it is not always obvious.”
Tad Williams (1957) novelist
Source: Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn, The Dragonbone Chair (1988), Chapter 10, “King Hemlock” (p. 142).
W. Chan Kim book Blue Ocean Strategy
Source: Blue Ocean Strategy, 2005, p. 15
“I never confuse the cost of something with its value”
Robin Hobb book The Mad Ship
Source: The Mad Ship
Friedrich Nietzsche book Twilight of the Idols
Variant translation: Liberal institutions straightway cease from being liberal the moment they are soundly established: once this is attained no more grievous and more thorough enemies of freedom exist than liberal institutions.
Expeditions of an Untimely Man, 38
Twilight of the Idols (1888)
Context: My conception of freedom. — The value of a thing sometimes does not lie in that which one attains by it, but in what one pays for it — what it costs us. I give an example. Liberal institutions cease to be liberal as soon as they are attained: later on, there are no worse and no more thorough injurers of freedom than liberal institutions. One knows, indeed, what their ways bring: they undermine the will to power; they level mountain and valley, and call that morality; they make men small, cowardly, and hedonistic [genüsslich] — every time it is the herd animal that triumphs with them. Liberalism: in other words, herd-animalization...
W. Chan Kim book Blue Ocean Strategy
Source: Blue Ocean Strategy, 2005, p. 17-18 (2016 extended edition)
John Quincy Adams (1767–1848) American politician, 6th president of the United States (in office from 1825 to 1829)
Attributed in The Rebirth of a Nation : With a Bill of Rights for America's Third Century (1978) by Robert S. Minor, p. 10; this is a paraphrase of a statement by his father John Adams in a letter to his mother Abigail Adams (27 April 1777): "Posterity! you will never know how much it cost the present generation to preserve your freedom! I hope you will make a good use of it. If you do not, I shall repent in Heaven that I ever took half the pains to preserve it".
Misattributed
Charles Caleb Colton (1777–1832) British priest and writer
Vol. I; XXVI
Lacon (1820)