“Music is the only language in which you cannot say a mean or sarcastic thing.”
John Erskine (1879–1951) American educator
E. H. Gombrich, Symbolic Images, (1972).
“Music is the only language in which you cannot say a mean or sarcastic thing.”
John Erskine (1879–1951) American educator
Robert A. Heinlein book Sixth Column
Source: Sixth Column (1949; originally serialized in 1941), Chapter 9 (p. 113)
William Cobbett (1763–1835) English pamphleteer, farmer and journalist
Page 14.
A Grammar of the English Language (1818)
Leonardo Da Vinci (1452–1519) Italian Renaissance polymath
The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci (1883), II Linear Perspective
Ludwig Wittgenstein book Philosophical Investigations
§ 43, this has often been quoted as simply: The meaning of a word is its use in the language.
Philosophical Investigations (1953)
Günter Brus (1938) Austrian artist
Source: Nervous Stillness on the Horizon (2006), P. 140 (1985)
Richard Stallman (1953) American software freedom activist, short story writer and computer programmer, founder of the GNU project
We address this problem by publishing a more precise definition of free software, but this is not a perfect solution; it cannot completely eliminate the problem. An unambiguously correct term would be better, if it didn't have other problems.
1990s, Why "Free Software" is better than "Open Source" (1998)
Akeel Bilgrami (1950) Indian philosopher
Source: Belief and Meaning (1992), Ch. 1 : Belief, Meaning, and the External World
Frank Herbert (1920–1986) American writer
Dune Genesis (1980)
Context: No matter how finely you subdivide time and space, each tiny division contains infinity.
But this could imply that you can cut across linear time, open it like a ripe fruit, and see consequential connections. You could be prescient, predict accurately. Predestination and paradox once more.
The flaw must lie in our methods of description, in languages, in social networks of meaning, in moral structures, and in philosophies and religions — all of which convey implicit limits where no limits exist. Paul Muad'Dib, after all, says this time after time throughout Dune.