1920s, Viereck interview (1929)
“Who, that has pity, is disposed to censure a child for rebelling against the useless and absurd rumination, thru painful years, of mummified languages and fearful mathematical formulae, which have no more real bearing, and which to the average human being never will have any more real bearing, on the great, living, performing universe around him than the esoteric nonsense of the Five Kings?”
Source: Better-World Philosophy: A Sociological Synthesis (1899), Individual Culture, p. 266
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J. Howard Moore 183
1862–1916Related quotes
Oskar Morgenstern, " Limits of the Use of Mathematics in Economics https://www.princeton.edu/~erp/ERParchives/archivepdfs/M49.pdf," in: James C. Charlesworth (Hg.), Mathematics and the Social Science. The Utility and Inutility of Mathematics in the Study of Economics, Political Sciences and Sociology, Philadelphia 1963, S. 12-29, hier S. 18.
Objectivism: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand (1993), Chapter 10: Government
1990s
“More was revealed in a human face than a human being can bear face to face.”
Source: One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
“Only the absurd could have any bearing on reality.”
Sea-horse in the Sky (1969)
The Crisis No. III.
1770s, The American Crisis (1776–1783)
“In my profession I have learned that women can bear more pain than men.'
'Are you a doctor, sir?”
'No. A shoe repairer.'
Page 123.
Other Peoples Children (1980)