“This is a proposal for a show, in which I imagine a Newly Born Limb, the Ghost of A Flea, and an Endless Note Petrified in Stone. I picture two prosthetic arms, one ancient, one modern, reaching out as far as they can, to grasp all that there is in the world.”

—  Mark Leckey

"Prop4aShw" (2013)

Adopted from Wikiquote. Last update June 3, 2021. History

Help us to complete the source, original and additional information

Do you have more details about the quote "This is a proposal for a show, in which I imagine a Newly Born Limb, the Ghost of A Flea, and an Endless Note Petrified…" by Mark Leckey?
Mark Leckey photo
Mark Leckey 5
British artist 1964

Related quotes

Fritz Leiber photo
Michel De Montaigne photo
Pat Murphy photo
Frank Herbert photo
Paul Scofield photo
Aldous Huxley photo
Lois McMaster Bujold photo
William Faulkner photo
Albert Einstein photo

“I take it to be true that pure thought can grasp the real, as the ancients had dreamed.”

Albert Einstein (1879–1955) German-born physicist and founder of the theory of relativity

from On the Method of Theoretical Physics, p. 183. The Herbert Spencer Lecture, delivered at Oxford (10 June 1933). Quoted in Einstein's Philosophy of Science http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/einstein-philscience/
1930s
Context: Our experience hitherto justifies us in trusting that nature is the realization of the simplest that is mathematically conceivable. I am convinced that purely mathematical construction enables us to find those concepts and those lawlike connections between them that provide the key to the understanding of natural phenomena. Useful mathematical concepts may well be suggested by experience, but in no way can they be derived from it. Experience naturally remains the sole criterion of the usefulness of a mathematical construction for physics. But the actual creative principle lies in mathematics. Thus, in a certain sense, I take it to be true that pure thought can grasp the real, as the ancients had dreamed.

Related topics