Werner Herzog (1942) German film director, producer, screenwriter, actor and opera director
Burden of Dreams (1982)
Burden of Dreams (1982)
Context: Taking a close look at what is around us, there is some sort of a harmony. It is the harmony of overwhelming and collective murder. And we in comparison to the articulate vileness and baseness and obscenity of all this jungle, we in comparison to that enormous articulation, we only sound and look like badly pronounced and half-finished sentences out of a stupid suburban novel, a cheap novel. And we have to become humble in front of this overwhelming misery and overwhelming fornication, overwhelming growth, and overwhelming lack of order. Even the stars up here in the sky look like a mess. There is no harmony in the universe. We have to get acquainted to this idea that there is no harmony as we have conceived it. But when I say this all full of admiration for the jungle. It is not that I hate it, I love it, I love it very much, but I love it against my better judgment.
Werner Herzog (1942) German film director, producer, screenwriter, actor and opera director
Burden of Dreams (1982)
“I moved through the days like a severed head that finishes a sentence.”
Amy Hempel (1951) Short story writer
Claude Elwood Shannon (1916–2001) American mathematician and information theorist
IRE Transactions on Information Theory (1956), volume 2, issue 1, page 3. * The Bandwagon
Shannon
Claude E.
2
1
1956
March
10.1109/TIT.1956.1056774.
Rudolf Carnap (1891–1970) German philosopher
Source: Carnap’s intellectual biography (1963), p. 62
Hermann Hesse (1877–1962) German writer
Siddhartha (1922)
Context: Everything that is thought and expressed in words is one-sided, only half the truth; it all lacks totality, completeness, unity. When the Illustrious Buddha taught about the world, he had to divide it into Samsara and Nirvana, illusion and truth, into suffering and salvation. One cannot do otherwise, there is no other method for those who teach. But the world itself, being in and around us, is never one-sided. Never is a man or a deed wholly Samsara or wholly Nirvana; never is a man wholly a saint or a sinner. This only seems so because we suffer the illusion that time is something real.
Christopher Walken (1943) American actor
Jason Walsh (October 17, 2004) "Walken on the edge", Marin Independent Journal, Section: Lifestyles.
Stephen Jay Gould book The Structure of Evolutionary Theory
Source: The Structure of Evolutionary Theory (2002), p. 778
“That shows an obscene! lack of foresight!”
TotalBiscuit (1984–2018) British game commentator
Audio blogs, Worms World Party Remastered b******s
Brian W. Aldiss (1925–2017) British science fiction author
“Man on Bridge” pp. 90-91
Short fiction, Who Can Replace a Man? (1965)
Maria Edgeworth book Castle Rackrent
Castle Rackrent (1800), Preface; Tales and Novels, vol. 1, p. 9.