I Found a Penny Today, So Here’s a Thought |


 |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
From our former outpost at Twitter: "'Life insurance': a pretense that it is a soothing and useful event to have a violent and painful death." — Leonora Carrington
|


 |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
"Does history record any case in which the majority was right?" — Robert Heinlein"Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it is time to pause and reflect." — Mark Twain"When the majority is buying, you should consider selling." — Greg Tanghe
|










 |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
"Writing is just the process of reading backwards, of unpacking from the skull what watching has filled the head with." — Geof Huth--- Daryl Griffiths writes: Via beauty of the timing of this statement I am ordered to intervene. From yesterday it certainly arrives and demands to know what time is it today, while hoping it not be tomorrow.
|

 |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
"Literature is a false representation of life that nevertheless helps us to understand life better, to orient ourselves in the labyrinth where we are born, pass by, and die. It compensates for the reverses and frustrations real life inflicts on us, and because of it we can decipher, at least partially, the hieroglyphic that existence tends to be for the great majority of human beings, principally those of us who generate more doubts than certainties and confess our perplexity before subjects like transcendence, individual and collective destiny, the soul, the sense or senselessness of history, the to and fro of rational knowledge." —Mario Vargas Llosa's Nobel lecture, "In Praise of Reading and Fiction," Dec. 7, 2010
|

 |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
"'Science is systematized and formulated knowledge.' Then anybody who has systematized and formulated knowledge enough to appear, on time, at the breakfast table, is, to that degree, a scientist. There are scientific dogs. Most of them have a great deal of systematized and formulated knowledge. Cats and rabbits and all those irritating South American rodents that were discovered by cross-word puzzle-makers are scientists. A magnet scientifically picks out and classifies iron filings from a mass of various materials. Science does not exist, as a distinguishable entity." —Charles Fort, Wild Talents
|

 |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
A fate worse than death: "It wasn't the dying. He had seen men die all his life, and death was the luck of the chance, the price you eventually paid. What was worse was the stupidity. The appalling sick stupidity that was so bad you thought sometimes you would go suddenly, violently, completely insane just having to watch it." — Michael Shaara, The Killer Angels
|

 |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
"Of course, in our acceptance, the Irish are the Chosen People. It's because they are characteristically best in accord with the underlying essence of quasi-existence." —Charles Fort, The Book of the Damned (1919)
|


Page 154 of 170

> Older Entries...

Original Content Copyright © 2025 by Craig Conley. All rights reserved.
|