“As a theorist I have great advantages. All I need is a pencil (now a ball pen) and an empty pad of paper. There are analysts who sit and look vacantly out the window, but after the age of 20 I was not one of them. I ought to envy the new generation who have grown up with the computer, but I don’t. None of them known to me sits idly at the console, improvising and experimenting in the way that a composer does at the piano. That ought to become increasingly possible. But up to now, in my observation, the computer is largely a black box into which researchers feed raw input and out of from which they draw various summarizing measures and simulations. Not having access to look around in the box, the investigator has less intuitive familiarity with the data than used to be the case in the bad old days.”
            “My Life Philosophy: Policy Credos and Working Ways,” in M. Szenberg (ed.) Eminent Economists: Their Life Philosophies (1992) 
1980s–1990s
        
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Paul A. Samuelson 47
American economist 1915–2009Related quotes
 
                            
                        
                        
                        
                                        
                                         UFC 178 post-event press conference https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zAAC34JzxS0 (September 2014), Ultimate Fighting Championship, Zuffa, LLC 
2010s, 2014
                                    
 
                            
                        
                        
                        
                                        
                                        letter to his friend Martín Zapater https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q3915977 and  https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bestand:Francisco_de_Goya_-_Portrait_of_Mart%C3%ADn_Zapater_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg, March 1793; from: 'Francisco de Goya. MS Letters to Martín Zapater 1774-99', Collection of Prado - published as Cartas a Martín Zapater; ed, X. de Salas & M. Agueda, Madrid 1982, p. 211; as quoted by Robert Hughes, in: Goya. Borzoi Book - Alfred Knopf, New York, 2003, p. 127 
Goya started to become deaf then, had fainting fits and spells of semi-blindness. From 1793 onward [he was 46] he became functionally deaf, till his death 
1790s
                                    
 
                            
                        
                        
                        When asked by Joseph Lamb if he was Scott Joplin, as quoted in "The Day Joseph Lamb Met Scott Joplin" https://www.portlandpianolab.com/the-day-joseph-lamb-met-scott-joplin/ (2 January 2016), by Doug Hanvey, Music Appreciation & Analysis, Portland Piano Lab
 
                            
                        
                        
                        Quoted by Richard Neustadt in Presidential Power: The Politics of Leadership http://books.google.com/books?id=-rxEAAAAIAAJ&q="I+sit+here+all+day+trying+to+persuade+people+to+do+the+things+they+ought+to+have+sense+enough+to+do+without+my+persuading+them"+"that's+all+the+powers+of+the+President+amount+to" (1964)
 
                            
                        
                        
                        
                                        
                                        Address in Des Moines, Iowa (4 November 1910) 
1910s
                                    
 
        
     
                             
                             
                             
                            