| | Readings for St. Patrick's Day
Books:
Finnegans Wake (1939)
Gravity's Rainbow (1978)
Masks of the Illuminati (1981)
Quotations:
"Nature does not know extinction; all it knows is transformation. Everything science has taught me, and continues to teach me, strengthens my belief in the continuity of our spiritual existence after death."
-- Wernher von Braun
"I faced myself that day with the nonplused apprehension of someone who has come across a vampire and has no crucifix in hand."
-- Joan Didion, "On Self-Respect," in Slouching Towards Bethlehem
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"For every kind of vampire, there is a kind of cross."
-- Thomas Pynchon, Gravity's Rainbow
Inscribed Carpenter's Square:

In Latin, NORMA
Multa renascentur quae iam cecidere, cadentque quae nunc sunt in honore uocabula, si uolet usus, quem penes arbitrium est et ius et norma loquendi.
-- Horace, Ars Poetica
Many terms will be born again that by now have sunk into oblivion, and many that are now held in respect will die out if that is what use should dictate in whose power is the judgment and the law and the rule of speech.
All, all must perish -- but, surviving last, The love of Letters half preserves the past; True -- some decay, yet not a few revive, Though those shall sink, which now appear to thrive, As Custom arbitrates, whose shifting sway Our life and language must alike obey.
-- Hints from Horace
"Norma was the latin word for what we now call a carpenter's
square. It was used to construct lines which were at right angles to
another line, so the created line was said to be 'normal.' The norma
was also used as a standard to compare if objects, like a wall, might
be erect (perpendicular to the ground) and so those that met the
standard were called 'normal' and this use extended to the 'typical'
element of any type of set. Eventually normal came to mean anything
that 'met the standard.' "
-- Pat Ballew on mathematical usage |
"317 is a prime, not because we think so, or because our minds are shaped in one way rather than another, but because it is so, because mathematical reality is built that way."
-- G. H. Hardy, A Mathematician's Apology
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