“The map had been the first form of misdirection, for what is a map but a way of emphasizing some things and making other things invisible?”
Source: Annihilation
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Jeff VanderMeer24
American writer 1968Related quotes
Alan MacEachren (1952) American geographer
Source: Research challenges in geovisualization (2001), p. 6-7
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)
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.
Michael Kurland book Ten Little Wizards
Source: Ten Little Wizards (1988), Chapter 6 (p. 51)
“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
Francis Heylighen (1960) Belgian cyberneticist
Source: Collective Intelligence and its Implementation on the Web (1999), p.265
Kurt Cobain (1967–1994) American musician and artist
From an interview with Marc Coiteux on Musique Plus, 1991-09-21, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Interviews (1989-1994), Video
Anantanand Rambachan (1951) Hindu studies scholar
Source: The Nature and Authority of Scripture (1995), p. 23
Context: Vivekananda followed his teacher, Ramakrishna, in attributing a low value to scriptures and in upholding the supremacy of personal experience. The adequacy of scriptures is compared to the utility of a map to a traveller, before visiting a country. The map, according to Vivekananda, can create only curiosity for first-hand knowledge of the place and can communicate only a vague conception of its reality. Maps are in no way equivalent to the direct knowledge of the country, gathered by actually being there.