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  fortune index  all fortunes 
  
 |  |  | #10380 |  | Men love to wonder, and that is the seed of science. 
 |  |  |  | #10381 |  | Men occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of them pick themselves up and hurry off as if nothing had happened.
 -- Winston Churchill
 
 |  |  |  | #10382 |  | Modern psychology takes completely for granted that behavior and neural function are perfectly correlated, that one is completely caused by the
 other.  There is no separate soul or lifeforce to stick a finger into the
 brain now and then and make neural cells do what they would not otherwise.
 Actually, of course, this is a working assumption only. ... It is quite
 conceivable that someday the assumption will have to be rejected.  But it
 is important also to see that we have not reached that day yet: the working
 assumption is a necessary one and there is no real evidence opposed to it.
 Our failure to solve a problem so far does not make it insoluble.  One cannot
 logically be a determinist in physics and biology, and a mystic in psychology.
 -- D.O. Hebb, "Organization of Behavior: A Neuropsychological
 Theory", 1949
 
 |  |  |  | #10383 |  | More than any time in history, mankind now faces a crossroads.  One path leads to despair and utter hopelessness, the other to total extinction.
 Let us pray that we have the wisdom to choose correctly.
 -- Woody Allen, "Side Effects"
 
 |  |  |  | #10384 |  | "Multiply in your head" (ordered the compassionate Dr. Adams) "365,365,365, 365,365,365 by 365,365,365,365,365,365".  He [ten-year-old Truman Henry
 Safford] flew around the room like a top, pulled his pantaloons over the
 tops of his boots, bit his hands, rolled his eyes in their sockets, sometimes
 smiling and talking, and then seeming to be in an agony, until, in not more
 than one minute, said he, 133,491,850,208,566,925,016,658,299,941,583,225!"
 An electronic computer might do the job a little faster but it wouldn't be
 as much fun to watch.
 -- James R. Newman, "The World of Mathematics"
 
 |  |  |  | #10385 |  | Murphy's Law, that brash proletarian restatement of Godel's Theorem. -- Thomas Pynchon, "Gravity's Rainbow"
 
 |  |  |  | #10386 |  | My geometry teacher was sometimes acute, and sometimes obtuse, but always, always, he was right.
 [That's an interesting angle.  I wonder if there are any parallels?]
 
 |  |  |  | #10387 |  | My message is not that biological determinists were bad scientists or even that they were always wrong.  Rather, I believe that science must be
 understood as a social phenomenon, a gutsy, human enterprise, not the work of
 robots programmed to collect pure information.  I also present this view as
 an upbeat for science, not as a gloomy epitaph for a noble hope sacrificed on
 the alter of human limitations.
 I believe that a factual reality exists and that science, though often
 in an obtuse and erratic manner, can learn about it.  Galileo was not shown
 the instruments of torture in an abstract debate about lunar motion.  He had
 threatened the Church's conventional argument for social and doctrinal
 stability:  the static world order with planets circling about a central
 earth, priests subordinate to the Pope and serfs to their lord.  But the
 Church soon made its peace with Galileo's cosmology.  They had no choice; the
 earth really does revolve about the sun.
 -- S.J. Gould, "The Mismeasure of Man"
 
 |  |  |  | #10388 |  | Mystics always hope that science will some day overtake them. -- Booth Tarkington
 
 |  |  |  | #10389 |  | Natural laws have no pity. 
 |  |  |  |  |  |   ...            ...   | 
 
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