
In response to Thom Yorke's comment that Coldplay makes "lifestyle music"
Gordon, Devin (2005-05-30), "Hot for Coldplay". Newsweek. 145 (22):64-68
Nicomachus of Gerasa: Introduction to Arithmetic (1926)
Context: Things... are some of them continuous... which are properly and peculiarly called 'magnitudes'; others are discontinuous, in a side-by-side arrangement, and, as it were, in heaps, which are called 'multitudes,' a flock, for instance, a people, a heap, a chorus, and the like.
Wisdom, then, must be considered to be the knowledge of these two forms. Since, however, all multitude and magnitude are by their own nature of necessity infinite—for multitude starts from a definite root and never ceases increasing; and magnitude, when division beginning with a limited whole is carried on, cannot bring the dividing process to an end... and since sciences are always sciences of limited things, and never of infinites, it is accordingly evident that a science dealing with magnitude... or with multitude... could never be formulated.... A science, however, would arise to deal with something separated from each of them, with quantity, set off from multitude, and size, set off from magnitude.<!--pp.183-184
In response to Thom Yorke's comment that Coldplay makes "lifestyle music"
Gordon, Devin (2005-05-30), "Hot for Coldplay". Newsweek. 145 (22):64-68
Geometrical Lectures (1735)
"Joan Didion" (1980)
The Moronic Inferno and Other Visits to America (1986)
“Some things, you know, if you say them, it makes them not true?”
Source: The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle
“Some things stayed secrets even when you told them.”
Source: Nemesis Games (2015), Chapter 3 (p. 33)
“Bodily, material things are… continuously involved in continuous flow and change”
Nicomachus of Gerasa: Introduction to Arithmetic (1926)
Context: Bodily, material things are... continuously involved in continuous flow and change—in imitation of the nature and peculiar quality of that eternal matter and substance which has been from the beginning... The bodiless things, however, of which we conceive in connection with or together with matter, such as qualities, quantities, configurations, largeness, smallness, equality, relations, actualities, dispositions, places, times, all those things... whereby the qualities in each body are comprehended—all these are of themselves immovable and unchangeable, but accidentally they share in and partake of the affections of the body to which they belong. Now it is with such things that 'wisdom' is particularly concerned, but accidentally also with... bodies.<!--p.181
“Time with its continuity logically involves some other kind of continuity than its own.”
The Law of Mind (1892)
Context: Time with its continuity logically involves some other kind of continuity than its own. Time, as the universal form of change, cannot exist unless there is something to undergo change, and to undergo a change continuous in time, there must be a continuity of changeable qualities.
“Some things become so completely our own that we forget them.”
Algunas cosas se hacen tan nuestras que las olvidamos.
Voces (1943)