Rebecca Solnit (1961) Author and essayist from United States
Source: Wanderlust: A History of Walking
Edition:Institute of General Semantics, 1995, p. 58.
Science and Sanity (1933)
Rebecca Solnit (1961) Author and essayist from United States
Source: Wanderlust: A History of Walking
“I would like my personal reading map to resemble a map of the British Empire circa 1900.”
Nick Hornby book Housekeeping vs. The Dirt
Source: Housekeeping vs. the Dirt
Jorge Luis Borges book On Exactitude in Science
On Exactitude in Science, as translated by Andrew Hurley, in Jorge Luis Borges, Collected Fictions (1999); first published in Los Anales de Buenos Aires, año 1, no. 3 (March 1946)
“The law of similarity made any map a magical instrument.”
Rick Cook (1944) American writer
The Wizardry Compiled (1989)
“The map is not the territory, and the name is not the thing named (see also, Alfred Korzybski).”
Gregory Bateson (1904–1980) English anthropologist, social scientist, linguist, visual anthropologist, semiotician and cyberneticist
Source: Mind and Nature: A Necessary Unity, 1979, p. 30
Anatol Rapoport (1911–2007) Russian-born American mathematical psychologist
Anatol Rapoport Science and the goals of man: a study in semantic orientation. Greenwood Press, 1950/1971. p. 85
1950s
KT Tunstall (1975) Scottish singer-songwriter and guitarist
"Suddenly I See".
Eye to the Telescope (2004)
Context: Her face is a map of the world
Is a map of the world
You can see she's a beautiful girl
She's a beautiful girl.
And everything around her is a silver pool of light
The people who surround her feel the benefit of it —
It makes you calm
She holds you captivated in her palm.
Alan MacEachren (1952) American geographer
Source: How Maps Work: Representation, Visualization, and Design (1995), p. 152. As cited in: V.P. Filippakopoulou et al. (2002)
Louis Kauffman (1945) American mathematician
Louis H. Kauffman, " EigenForm http://www.univie.ac.at/constructivism/pub/hvf/papers/kauffman05eigenform.pdf." Kybernetes 34.1/2 (2005): 129-150.