Paul Graham (1964) English programmer, venture capitalist, and essayist
"A Plan for Spam" http://www.paulgraham.com/spam.html, August 2002
Katastroika (1988)
Paul Graham (1964) English programmer, venture capitalist, and essayist
"A Plan for Spam" http://www.paulgraham.com/spam.html, August 2002
Jean-Baptiste Say (1767–1832) French economist and businessman
Source: A Treatise On Political Economy (Fourth Edition) (1832), Book II, On Distribution, Chapter XI, Section I, p. 381 (See also: Max Weber)
Thomas Henry Huxley (1825–1895) English biologist and comparative anatomist
Darwiniana: the Origin of Species (1860) http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext04/8thdr10.txt <br class="br">1860s <br class="br">Context: It is true that if philosophers have suffered their cause has been amply avenged. Extinguished theologians lie about the cradle of every science as the strangled snakes beside that of Hercules; and history records that whenever science and orthodoxy have been fairly opposed, the latter has been forced to retire from the lists, bleeding and crushed if not annihilated; scotched, if not slain. But orthodoxy is the Bourbon of the world of thought. It learns not, neither can it forget; and though, at present, bewildered and afraid to move, it is as willing as ever to insist that the first chapter of Genesis contains the beginning and the end of sound science...
“Fascists are not human. A snake is more human.”
Hugo Chávez (1954–2013) 48th President of Venezuela
Referring to Spanish politician José María Aznar as a fascist, November 2007. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7089131.stm <br class="br">2007
Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury (1830–1903) British politician
On the London County Council; speech to the metropolitan division of the National Union of Conservative and Constitutional Associations in the Queen's Hall, Langham Place (7 November 1894), quoted in The Times (8 November 1894), p. 4
1890s
J. B. S. Haldane book The Causes of Evolution
Source: The Causes of Evolution (1932), Ch. IV Natural Selection, pp. 104-106.
Context: Where natural selection slackens, new forms may arise which would not survive under more rigid competition, and many ultimately hardy combinations will thus have a chance of arising.... Thus the distinction between the principal mammalian orders seems to have arisen during an orgy of variation in the early Eocene which followed the doom of the great reptiles... Since that date mammalian evolution has been a slower affair, largely a progressive improvement of the types originally laid down in the Eocene.
Another possible mode of making rapid evolutionary jumps is by hybridisation.... hybridisation (where the hybrids are fertile) usually causes an epidemic of variation in the second generation which may include new and valuable types which could not have arisen within a species by slower evolution.
Marshall McLuhan (1911–1980) Canadian educator, philosopher, and scholar-- a professor of English literature, a literary critic, and a …
1990s and beyond, The Book of Probes : Marshall McLuhan (2011)
“I had a garter snake named Clayton.”
Noel Fielding (1973) British comedian and actor
HermAphroditeZine, Autumn 1999
James Madison (1751–1836) 4th president of the United States (1809 to 1817)
1820s, Letter to F. Corbin (1820)