Better Read Than Dead

An opinion article in the Post by Jennie Bev, Loneliness and an introverted writer, caught my eye because almost in its entirety it encapsulates what makes me tick as a writer. I was going to quote the closing paragraphs because they would serve as the introduction to another post I have in draft form. However, her introduction serves equally well for this post.
 
Reality is the one word that Vladimir Nabokov said shouldn’t go without quotation marks, despite the fact it is something that most artists and writers have been pursuing and imitating as closely as possible.
 
An interesting noteworthy version of “reality” is aphorism, which is one of the oldest forms of literature. Aphorism is basically a collection of sayings and criticisms, just like Heraclitus’ fragments, Confucius’ musings, Aurelius’ snippets of wisdom, and Franz Kafka’s notebooks. These fragments and musings were results of observation and reflexive activities to encapsulate “reality” and “realities”.
 
Ever since I started Jakartass I've collected resonances of wisdom. Thanks to Jennie, I've now got an excuse to post them.
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If you can't see this page please click here.

I like the power of words, and not just because that's how I support all of us in Jakartass Towers. I could kibble and give hundreds of reasons which run the gamut from elation to grief.

Or I could give you a lecture on my 'native' language and how it's evolving, as it should, into 'Goblish'.

But I won't.

What I'm posting here is a collection of snippets cut from various articles because I like bons mots (pithy remarks). They may be taken out of context but they resonate with me and I haven't (yet) got round to expanding them into a post.

My title is, I think, wholly original, something I came up with during my morning ritual in the privy.

Sarchasm: The gulf between the author of sarcastic wit and the reader who doesn't get it.

On Blogging

To be unexpressed is the road to unhappiness.
Ben Kingsley

There is so much good in the worst of us and so much bad in the best of us, that it behoves all of us not to talk about the rest of us.
Robert Louis Stevenson

On Human Potential

Nobody knows anything.
Michael Palin

Aesthetics cannot be replaced wholesale by bean-counting analysis.
fr. a review of How Music Works and Why We Can't Do Without It

I call myself a possibilian. The idea with possibilianism is to explore new ideas and to shine a flashlight around the possibility space to really understand what the size of that space is.
David Eagleman

You shoot your arrow and then you paint your bullseye around it, and therefore you have hit the target dead centre.
Brian Eno

The most important lesson life has taught me is that all my mistakes and difficult times have been my best teachers.
Hayley Mills

You define who you are and where you are by the things that you know you are not.
Brian Eno

Life is fragile and short. Don't waste it by being mean or greedy.
Felicity Kendal

On Getting Old-er

Getting old is when you start complaining about the next generation.
Jenny Agutter

People say that …….. you're not an angry young man, just a grumpy old git. But why should I get to a certain age and go, yeah that's OK? Why do I have to accept everything? If you don't want it, say so and if you want to kick against it, you should do that as well, whatever age you are.

Paul Weller

We were probably the last generation to be truly free to play.
Sue Townsend

On Religion

I don't want places to worship.
My worship is the service of the people

Aşik Ibret

We understand far too much to commit to one religious story.
David Eagleman

Religious ecstasy has overtones of Catherine of Siena drinking the pus of lepers.
Brian Eno

On Democracy

Democracy substitutes election by the incompetent many for appointment by the corrupt few.
Bernard Shaw

Whoever you vote for, the government gets in.
Jakartass and many others

On Community Power

What makes wage slaves? Wages!
Groucho Marx

Only the mediocre are scared of egalitarianism.
Bernard Shaw

We're far too smart for our own good, but not nearly clever enough for our own benefit.
Agent 3244

On Climate Change Deniers

I'm no scientist. I'm not an engineer either, but if I asked 100 engineers whether it was safe to cross a bridge, and 99 said no, I'd probably try to find another way over the ravine rather than loudly siding with the underdog and arguing about what constitutes a consensus while trundling across in my Hummer.
Charlie Brooker

3 Responses to “Better Read Than Dead”

  1. ultratupai says:

    "Yep, let them eat monkey meatballs in the mean time it’s off to Pacific Place with the Ferrari and a fist full of rupiahs."
    One of my own recent quotes…

  2. miko says:

    If I asked 100 engineers whether it was safe to cross a bridge, and 99 said no, I'd probably try to find another way over the ravine.
     
    It's a shame you use such a superficial and clearly inaccurate quotation as an example of "pithy" comments, as it detracts from the other more accurate comments.
     
    First of all by no means can it be claimed that "99%" of scientists accept AGW, it's way, way far short of that number and even then if I was about to cross a bridge and only five per cent of the engineers said it was unsafe and 95% said it was fine I would still think twice, so simple majoritarianism doesn't really come into the issue, that is merely scaremongering.
     
    But what if I was told that the bridge may or may not be safe but the alternative involved throwing away all that I and my family had built up over the years, abandoning everything that we had painstakingly achieved over our lives and instead risking our livelihoods and security on some hare brained "safe" passage through a hugely dangerous ravine filled with who knows what hardships and terrors on the back of half baked, blatantly ill thought through snake-oil salesmanship that may or may not be true from people whose past predictions and theories have quite frankly often proven to be complete bonkers?
     
    Furthermore what if I discovered that the people telling me the bridge was "unsafe" were not quite the disinterested, neutral scientists they claimed to be but where in fact being very richly rewarded for coming up with their "unsafe bridge" theory and had used quite ferocious attacks and bully boy methods against anyone who questioned their research?
     
    What if they had very substantial financial interests in directing me and my family down the rocky ravine instead of using the bridge, the bridge might I add which has already long stood the test of time and which currently seems to be perfectly sound and at the moment handling vast amounts of traffic? What if I found out that instead of using the perfectly functioning bridge I should take the dodgy ravine route I will be expected to pay huge sums of money and that much of that money will be lining the pockets of the "unsafe bridge" brigade?
     
    Who would be the fool then? The poor idiots climbing down the ravine or the people whizzing perfectly freely and happily over the bridge that has so far supported millions like them?
     
    I know what I would do.
     

  3. Jakartass says:

     "…. a superficial and clearly inaccurate quotation."?

    Sorry, Miko, but I do give a link to the sources. Still, I do agree that it's not pithy.

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