Kingman Brewster, Jr. (1919–1988) American diplomat
Inaugural address as President of Yale University (11 April 1964)
Source: Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson (1990), p. 13
Kingman Brewster, Jr. (1919–1988) American diplomat
Inaugural address as President of Yale University (11 April 1964)
“Distorted realities have always been my cup of tea.”
Virginia Woolf (1882–1941) English writer
Source: Selected Diaries
Rollo May (1909–1994) US psychiatrist
Source: The Discovery of Being (1983), p. 51-52
Context: Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, and those who followed them accurately foresaw this growing split between truth and reality in Western culture, and they endeavored to call Western man back from the delusion that reality can be comprehended in an abstracted, detached way. But though they protested vehemently against arid intellectualism, they were by no means simple activists. Nor were they antirational. Anti-intellectualism and other movements in our day which make thinking subordinate to acting must not at all be confused with existentialism. Either alternative-making man subject or object-results in loosing the living, existing person.
George Soros (1930) Hungarian-American business magnate, investor, and philanthropist
BuzzFlash interview (2004)
Context: Stock market bubbles don't grow out of thin air. They have a solid basis in reality — but reality as distorted by a misconception. Under normal conditions misconceptions are self-correcting, and the markets tend toward some kind of equilibrium. Occasionally, a misconception is reinforced by a trend prevailing in reality, and that is when a boom-bust process gets under way. Eventually the gap between reality and its false interpretation becomes unsustainable, and the bubble bursts.
John Perry Barlow (1947–2018) American poet and essayist
John Perry Barlow 2.0 (2004)
Context: You now have two distinct ways of gathering information beyond what you yourself can experience. One of them is less a medium than an environment — the Internet — with a huge multiplicity of points of view, lots of different ways to find out what's going on in the world. Lots of people are tuned to that, and a million points of view have bloomed. It creates a cacophony of viewpoints that doesn't have any political coherence at all, a beautiful melee, but it doesn't have the capacity to create large blocs of belief.
The other medium, TV, has a much smaller share of viewers than at any time in the past, but those viewers get all their information there. They get turned into a very uniform belief block. TV in America created the most coherent reality distortion field that I’ve ever seen. Therein is the problem: People who vote watch TV, and they are hallucinating like a sonofabitch. Basically, what we have in this country is government by hallucinating mob.
“We should neither bemoan nor naively idealize this new reality. We should deal with it.”
Al Gore (1948) 45th Vice President of the United States
Quotes, IPI speech (2000)
Context: We are now in a new era. To label this time "the post-Cold War era" belies its uniqueness and its significance. We are now in a Global Age. Like it or not, we live in an age when our destinies and the destinies of billions of people around the globe are increasingly intertwined. When our grand domestic and international challenges are also intertwined. We should neither bemoan nor naively idealize this new reality. We should deal with it.
Adam Roberts book Twenty Trillion Leagues Under the Sea
Source: Twenty Trillion Leagues Under the Sea (2014), Chapter 24, “Dakkar” (p. 229)
Margaret Mead (1901–1978) American anthropologist
Source: 1930s, Sex and Temperament in Three Primitive Societies (1935), p. 191