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“Jiro Ono serves Edo-style traditional sushi, the same 20 or 30 pieces he's been making his whole life, and he's still unsatisfied with the quality and every day wakes up and trains to make the best. And that is as close to a religious experience in food as one is likely to get.”
Anthony Bourdain“Mothers cry in anguishand fathers curse in anger,while others turn away in sadness,all for the children who are lost.”
Katlyn Charlesworth, A Thousand Deaths“Where do you go when you die twice-lest a thousand deaths?”
Katlyn Charlesworth, A Thousand Deaths“Oh, she's still here;she's just not as pretty... anymore.”
Katlyn Charlesworth, A Thousand Deaths“It is dark and there are bad creatures in these woods.""Yes, there are...”
Katlyn Charlesworth, A Thousand Deaths“If we increase r [in a logistic map] even more, we will eventually force the system into a period-8 limit cycle, then a period-16 cycle, and so on. The amount that we have to increase r to get another period doubling gets smaller and smaller for each new bifurcation. This cascade of period doublings is reminiscent of the race between Achilles and the tortoise, in that an infinite number of bifurcations (or time steps in the race) can be confined to a local region of finite size. At a very special critical value, the dynamical system will fall into what is essentially an infinite-period limit cycle. This is chaos.”
Gary William Flake, The Computational Beauty of Nature - Computer Explorations of Fractals, Chaos, Complex Systems & Adaption (Paper)“That the nobility of Man, acquired in a hundred centuries of trial and error, lay in making himself the conquerer of matter, and that I had enrolled in chemistry because I wanted to maintain faithful to that nobility. That conquering matter is to understand it, and understanding matter is necessary to understanding the universe and ourselves: and that therefore Mendeleev’s Periodic Table, which just during those weeks we were laboriously learning to unravel, was poetry, loftier and more solemn than all the poetry we had swallowed doen in liceo; and come to think of it, it even rhymed! …[T]he chemistry and physics on which we fed, besides being in themselves nourishments vital in themselves, were the antidotes to Fascism … because they were clear and distinct and verifiable at every step, and not a tissue of lies and emptiness like the radio and newspapers.”
Primo Levi, The Periodic Table