Books, in the plural lose their solidity of substance and become a gas, filling all available space.

Books, in the plural lose their solidity of substance and become a gas, filling all available space.

John Derbyshire
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Books, in the plural lose their solidity of substance and become a gas, filling all available space.

John Derbyshire
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I preach that odd defiant melancholy that sees the dreadful loneliness of the human soul and the pitiful disaster of human life as ever redeemable and redeemed by compassion, friendship and love.

John Derbyshire, Fire from the Sun
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The problem is hedonism. The problem is the preening vanity and selfishness of 'coming out,' of parading private inclinations, of a kind that repel normal people, as if those inclinations were, all by themselves, marks of authenticity and virtue, of suffering and oppression.

John Derbyshire, We Are Doomed: Reclaiming Conservative Pessimism
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The ordinary modes of human thinking are magical, religious, social, and personal. We want our wishes to come true; we want the universe to care about us; we want the approval of those around us; we want to get even with that s.o.b. who insulted us at the last tribal council. For most people, wanting to know the cold truth about the world is way, way down the list.

John Derbyshire, We Are Doomed: Reclaiming Conservative Pessimism
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Ninety percent of paid work is time-wasting crap. The world gets by on the other ten.

John Derbyshire, We Are Doomed: Reclaiming Conservative Pessimism
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Our political system is now run by the Big People for their own interests. If they ever deign to notice the Little People, it is with disdain and contempt.

John Derbyshire, We Are Doomed: Reclaiming Conservative Pessimism
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Mathematicians call it “the arithmetic of congruences.” You can think of it as clock arithmetic. Temporarily replace the 12 on a clock face with 0. The 12 hours of the clock now read 0, 1, 2, 3, … up to 11. If the time is eight o’clock, and you add 9 hours, what do you get? Well, you get five o’clock. So in this arithmetic, 8 + 9 = 5; or, as mathematicians say, 8 + 9 ≡ 5 (mod 12), pronounced “eight plus nine is congruent to five, modulo twelve.

John Derbyshire, Prime Obsession: Bernhard Riemann and the Greatest Unsolved Problem in Mathematics
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