Enoch Powell (1912–1998) British politician
Conservative Party conference, 1968 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A0t3BTAF0ns <br class="br">1960s
lecture III: "This Unscientific Age"
The Meaning of It All (1999)
Enoch Powell (1912–1998) British politician
Conservative Party conference, 1968 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A0t3BTAF0ns <br class="br">1960s
Theodore Kaczynski (1942) American domestic terrorist, mathematician and anarchist
Interview from primitivism.com http://www.primitivism.com/kaczynski.htm <br class="br">Interviews
China Miéville (1972) English writer
Interview with Joan Gordon
Context: There’s simultaneously something rigorous and something playful in genre. It’s about the positing of something impossible—whether not-yet-possible or never-possible—and then taking that impossibility and granting it its own terms and systematicity. It’s carnivalesque in its impossibility and overturning of reality, but it’s rationalist in that it pretends it is real. And it’s that second element which I think those who dip their toes in the SF pond so often forget. They think sf is “about” analogies, and metaphors, and so on. I refute that—I think that those are inevitable components, but it’s the surrendering to the impossible, the weird, that characterizes genre. Those flirting with SF don’t surrender to it; they distance themselves from it, and have a neon sub-text saying, “It’s okay, this isn’t really about spaceships or aliens, it’s about real life,” not understanding that it can be both, and would do the latter better if it was serious about the former.
Theodore Roosevelt (1858–1919) American politician, 26th president of the United States
1910s, Address at Milwaukee, Wisconsin (1912)
Otto von Bismarck (1815–1898) German statesman, Chancellor of Germany
Speech to the Prussian United Diet (15 June 1847), quoted in W. H. Dawson, Bismarck and State Socialism: An Exposition of the Social and Economic Legislation of Germany since 1870 (London: Swan Sonnenschein & Co., 1891), p. 27
1840s
Richard Feynman book The Pleasure of Finding Things Out
I might think about it a little bit, and if I can't figure it out then I go on to something else. But I don't have to know an answer. I don't feel frightened by not knowing things, by being lost in the mysterious universe without having any purpose — which is the way it really is, as far as I can tell. Possibly. It doesn't frighten me. <br class="br">Source: No Ordinary Genius (1994), p. 239, from interview in "The Pleasure of Finding Things Out" (1981): video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NEwUwWh5Xs4&t=48m10s
Richard Feynman book The Pleasure of Finding Things Out
Source: No Ordinary Genius (1994), p. 239, from interview in "The Pleasure of Finding Things Out" (1981): video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NEwUwWh5Xs4&t=48m10s