Harold Chestnut (1917–2001) American engineer
Source: Systems Engineering Tools, (1965), Systems Engineering Methods (1967), p. 1: First paragraph of Ch. 1. The Environment for System Engineering Methods
Jokes and their Relation to the Cognitive Unconscious (1980)
Context: All intelligent persons also possess some larger-scale frame-systems whose members seemed at first impossibly different — like water with electricity, or poetry with music. Yet many such analogies — along with the knowledge of how to apply them — are among our most powerful tools of thought. They explain our ability sometimes to see one thing — or idea — as though it were another, and thus to apply knowledge and experience gathered in one domain to solve problems in another. It is thus that we transfer knowledge via the paradigms of Science. We learn to see gases and fluids as particles, particles as waves, and waves as envelopes of growing spheres.
Harold Chestnut (1917–2001) American engineer
Source: Systems Engineering Tools, (1965), Systems Engineering Methods (1967), p. 1: First paragraph of Ch. 1. The Environment for System Engineering Methods
Herbert A. Simon (1916–2001) American political scientist, economist, sociologist, and psychologist
Simon (1993. p. 2); Cited in Mario Catalani, Giuseppe F. Clerico (1996) Decision making structures. p. 1.
1980s and later
Dejan Stojanovic (1959) poet, writer, and businessman
Big Miniature http://www.poetrysoup.com/famous/poem/21376/Big_Miniature <br class="br">From the poems written in English
Ethan Allen (1738–1789) American general
Source: Reason: The Only Oracle Of Man (1784), Ch. II Section III - Of The Eternity and Infinitude of Divine Providence
Context: It is altogether reasonable to conclude that the heavenly bodies, alias worlds, which move or are situate within the circle of our knowledge, as well all others throughout immensity, are each and every one of them possessed or inhabited by some intelligent agents or other, however different their sensations or manners of receiving or communicating their ideas may be from ours, or however different from each other. For why would it not have been as wise or as consistent with the perfections which we adore in God, to have neglected giving being to intelligence in this world as in those other worlds, interspersed with another of various qualities in his immense creation? And inasmuch as this world is thus replenished, we may, with the highest rational certainty infer, that as God has given us to rejoice, and adore him for our being, he has acted consistent with his goodness, in the display of his providence throughout the university of worlds.
Harry V. Jaffa (1918–2015) American historian and collegiate professor
2000s, God Bless America (2008), The American Proposition
Clinton Edgar Woods (1863) American engineer
Source: The Electric Automobile (1900), p. 14; Cited in: Imes Chui (2006, p. 106)
W. H. Auden book The Dyer's Hand
The Dyer's Hand (1955), in the BBC weekly The Listener (30 June 1955)