“Everything one invents is true, you may be perfectly sure of that. Poetry is as precise as geometry.”
14 August 1853
Correspondence, Letters to Madame Louise Colet
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Gustave Flaubert98
French writer (1821–1880) 1821–1880Related quotes
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Arithmetica Universalis (1707)
Context: Geometry was invented that we might expeditiously avoid, by drawing Lines, the Tediousness of Computation. Therefore these two Sciences ought not to be confounded. The Antients did so industriously distinguish them from one another, that they never introduc'd Arithmetical Terms into Geometry. And the Moderns, by confounding both, have lost the Simplicity in which all the Elegancy of Geometry consists. Wherefore that is Arithmetically more simple which is determin'd by the more simple Æquations, but that is Geometrically more simple which is determin'd by the more simple drawing of Lines; and in Geometry, that ought to be reckon'd best which is Geometrically most simple. Wherefore, I ought not to be blamed, if with that Prince of Mathematicians, Archimedes and other Antients, I make use of the Conchoid for the Construction of solid Problems.<!--p.230
“one can never be sure whether it's good poetry or bad acid”
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Source: Love Is a Dog from Hell
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