Mark Rosenfelder American language inventor
God <br class="br">About a leader of the Tžuro http://www.zompist.com/almea.htm#Tzhuro <br class="br">Fictional sayings
Entry (1956)
Eric Hoffer and the Art of the Notebook (2005)
Mark Rosenfelder American language inventor
God <br class="br">About a leader of the Tžuro http://www.zompist.com/almea.htm#Tzhuro <br class="br">Fictional sayings
Ai Weiwei (1957) Chinese concept artist
Solway, Diane. “Enforced Disappearance.” W Magazine, November 2011.
2010-, 2011
Susan Sontag (1933–2004) American writer and filmmaker, professor, and activist
"Susan Sontag: The Rolling Stone Interview" with Jonathan Cott (1978; published 4 October 1979)
Context: One of my oldest crusades is against the distinction between thought and feeling... which is really the basis of all anti-intellectual views: the heart and the head, thinking and feeling, fantasy and judgment. We have more or less the same bodies, but very different kinds of thoughts. I believe that we think much more with the instruments provided by our culture than we do with our bodies, and hence the much greater diversity of thought in the world. Thinking is a form of feeling; feeling is a form of thinking.
“The greater the obstacle, the more glory in overcoming it.”
Molière (1622–1673) French playwright and actor
David C. McClelland (1917–1998) American psychological theorist
Source: The Archiving Society, 1961, p. 104-5
Peter Sloterdijk (1947) German philosopher
Source: Kritik der zynischen Vernunft [Critique of Cynical Reason] (1983), p. xxxii
Neil deGrasse Tyson (1958) American astrophysicist and science communicator
Global Ideas from Pluto's Challenger (May 21, 2009)
Context: Creativity is seeing what everyone else sees, but then thinking a new thought that has never been thought before and expressing it somehow. It could be with art, a sculpture, music or even in science. The difference, however, between scientific creativity and any other kind of creativity, is that no matter how long you wait, no one else will ever compose "Beethoven's Ninth Symphony" except for Beethoven. No matter what you do, no one else will paint Van Gogh's "Starry Night." Only Van Gogh could do that because it came from his creativity.Whereas in science, you can't just make stuff up and presume that it is a proper account of nature. At the end of the day, you have to answer to nature. Since everyone has nature to answer to, your creativity is simply discovering something about the natural world that somebody else would have eventually discovered exactly the same way. They might have come through a different path, but they would have landed in the same place.Even though we name theorems and equations after the people who discover them — Newton's laws of gravity, Kepler's laws of planetary motion — somebody else would have discovered them afterward. It's that simple. Your creativity is not a boundless creativity.