William Golding (1911–1993) British novelist, poet, playwright and Nobel Prize for Literature laureate
As quoted in "The Dreams of William Golding", BBC Arena (2012)
Source: Quantum gravity (2004), p. 4
William Golding (1911–1993) British novelist, poet, playwright and Nobel Prize for Literature laureate
As quoted in "The Dreams of William Golding", BBC Arena (2012)
Vanna Bonta (1958–2014) Italian-American writer, poet, inventor, actress, voice artist (1958-2014)
Vanna Bonta Talks Sex in Space (Interview - Femail magazine)
as quoted by Devi Mathieu, in Physicist Richard Muller helps prepare tomorrow’s leaders for a technological world http://berkeley.edu/news/berkeleyan/2003/02/26_.shtml, The Berkeleyan, 26 February 2003.
Richard von Mises (1883–1953) Austrian physicist and mathematician
First Lecture, The Definition of Probability, p. 8
Probability, Statistics And Truth - Second Revised English Edition - (1957)
Nayef Al-Rodhan (1959) philosopher, neuroscientist, geostrategist, and author
Knowledge and Global Order https://www.bbvaopenmind.com/en/article/knowledge-and-global-order/?fullscreen=true - OpenMind September 2013
Albert Einstein (1879–1955) German-born physicist and founder of the theory of relativity
1950s, On the Generalized Theory of Gravitation (1950)
John Gray (1948) British philosopher
Cross-correspondences (p. 69-70)
The Immortalization Commission: The Strange Quest to Cheat Death (2011)
Arthur Stanley Eddington (1882–1944) British astrophysicist
Science and the Unseen World (1929)
Context: If to-day you ask a physicist what he has finally made out the æther or the electron to be, the answer will not be a description in terms of billiard balls or fly-wheels or anything concrete; he will point instead to a number of symbols and a set of mathematical equations which they satisfy. What do the symbols stand for? The mysterious reply is given that physics is indifferent to that; it has no means of probing beneath the symbolism. To understand the phenomena of the physical world it is necessary to know the equations which the symbols obey but not the nature of that which is being symbolised.... this newer outlook has modified the challenge from the material to the spiritual world.<!--III, p.30