
Source: Innumeracy: Mathematical Illiteracy and its Consequences (1988), Chapter 5, “Statistics, Trade-Offs, and Society” (p. 159)
Source: An Introduction to English Poetry (2002), Ch. 5: The Iambic Pentameter (p. 28)
Source: Innumeracy: Mathematical Illiteracy and its Consequences (1988), Chapter 5, “Statistics, Trade-Offs, and Society” (p. 159)
Discourse of English Poetrie http://www.bartleby.com/209/161.html, 1871 [1586], pp. 57–8.
“Most marriages don't add two people together. They subtract one from the other.”
Source: Diamonds Are Forever
“We’ve tested more than every other country in the world even put together.”
Quoted by * 2020-04-21
Trump just said the US has done more coronavirus testing than the rest of the world. Not even close.
Aaron Rupar
Vox
https://www.vox.com/2020/4/21/21230400/trump-coronavirus-briefing-testing-other-countries-combined
Note: At that time, the US had done just above 4 million tests, while worldwide more than 20 million tests had been done.
2020s, 2020, April
Entry (1962)
Eric Hoffer and the Art of the Notebook (2005)
The Syntax of Sorcery (2012)
Context: Certain individual words do possess more pitch, more radiance, more shazam! than others, but it's the way words are juxtaposed with other words in a phrase or sentence that can create magic. Perhaps literally. The word "grammar," like its sister word "glamour," is actually derived from an old Scottish word that meant "sorcery." When we were made to diagram sentences in high school, we were unwittingly being instructed in syntax sorcery, in wizardry. We were all enrolled at Hogwarts. Who knew?
When a culture is being dumbed down as effectively as ours is, its narrative arts (literature, film, theatre) seem to vacillate between the brutal and the bland, sometimes in the same work. The pervasive brutality in current fiction – the death, disease, dysfunction, depression, dismemberment, drug addiction, dementia, and dreary little dramas of domestic discord – is an obvious example of how language in exploitative, cynical or simply neurotic hands can add to the weariness, the darkness in the world. Less apparent is that bland writing — timid, antiseptic, vanilla writing – is nearly as unhealthy as the brutal and dark. Instead of sipping, say, elixir, nectar, tequila, or champagne, the reader is invited to slurp lumpy milk or choke on the author's dust bunnies.