“As a matter of fact, she has refused to marry me.”
“So when's the wedding?” Ramsey asked.”
Julie Garwood (1946) American writer
Source: Ransom
Source: The Jungles of Randomness: A Mathematical Safari (1997), Chapter 2, “Sea of Life” (p. 25)
“As a matter of fact, she has refused to marry me.”
“So when's the wedding?” Ramsey asked.”
Julie Garwood (1946) American writer
Source: Ransom
John Polkinghorne (1930) physicist and priest
Divine Action: An Interview with John Polkinghorne http://www.aril.org/polkinghorne.htm by Lyndon F. Harris in Cross Currents, Spring 1998, Vol. 48 Issue 1.
Thomas H. Davenport (1954) American academic
A process is thus a specific ordering of work activities across time and space, with a beginning and an end, and clearly defined inputs and outputs: a structure for action.
Process Innovation: Reengineering Work through Information Technology, 1993
Cassandra Clare book City of Bones
Simon to Clary, pg. 114
Source: The Mortal Instruments, City of Bones (2007)
Albert Einstein (1879–1955) German-born physicist and founder of the theory of relativity
(1955) as quoted in Some strangeness in the proportion: a centennial symposium to celebrate the achievements of Albert Einstein (1980) Addison-Wesley Pub. Co., Advanced Book Program.
1950s
Johann Gottlieb Fichte book Address to the German Nation
General Nature of New Eduction p. 45
Addresses to the German Nation (Reden an die deutsche Nation) 1808, Third Address
Sallustius Roman philosopher and writer
XVII. That the World is by nature Eternal.
On the Gods and the Cosmos
Werner Heisenberg (1901–1976) German theoretical physicist
"Introductory" in The Physical Principles of the Quantum Theory (1930) as translated by Carl Eckhart and Frank C. Hoyt, p. 10
Context: Light and matter are both single entities, and the apparent duality arises in the limitations of our language. It is not surprising that our language should be incapable of describing the processes occurring within the atoms, for, as has been remarked, it was invented to describe the experiences of daily life, and these consist only of processes involving exceedingly large numbers of atoms. Furthermore, it is very difficult to modify our language so that it will be able to describe these atomic processes, for words can only describe things of which we can form mental pictures, and this ability, too, is a result of daily experience. Fortunately, mathematics is not subject to this limitation, and it has been possible to invent a mathematical scheme — the quantum theory — which seems entirely adequate for the treatment of atomic processes; for visualisation, however, we must content ourselves with two incomplete analogies — the wave picture and the corpuscular picture.
“In the random flux of universal contingency, nothing mattered; and yet, and yet...”
Kim Stanley Robinson book Green Mars
Source: Green Mars (1993), Chapter 3, “Long Runout” (p. 125)