[W]e didn't do much to alter the course of human history, did we?' said Philip. 'As one old spy to another, I reckon I'd have been more use running a boys' club. Don't know what you feel.'
A commonplace book: an old-fashioned literary diary for recording interesting items from reading you've done. I use mine to record snippets from reading, conversation and life in general. (The early 2003 entries are from a period some years ago -- before the blog age -- when I tried an online commonplace book as a straight web page.)
Saturday, April 23, 2022
If a machine can think, it might think more intelligently than we do, and then where should we be? Even if we could keep the machines in a subservient position, for instance by turning off the power at strategic moments, we should, as a species, feel greatly humbled. … This new danger … if it comes at all … is remote but not astronomically remote, and is certainly something which can give us anxiety. It is customary, in a talk or article on this subject, to offer a grain of comfort, in the form of a statement that some particularly human characteristic could never be imitated by a machine. It might for instance be said that no machine could write good English, or that it could not be influenced by sex-appeal or smoke a pipe. I cannot offer any such comfort, for I believe that no such bounds can be set.
Alan Turing, quoted by Sebastian Sunday Grève in AI’s first philosopher: https://aeon.co/essays/why-we-should-remember-alan-turing-as-a-philosopher
Thursday, April 21, 2022
Monday, April 18, 2022
Tuesday, April 12, 2022
[I]n a large house, formerly a house of state ... in those shrunken fragments of its greatness, lawyers lie like maggots in nuts.
Charles Dickens, Bleak House
Friday, February 18, 2022
We must not expect to find reason anywhere in Nature, but only the evidence of will!
Pliny the Elder, Natural History
Wednesday, February 09, 2022
From a wonderful and beautiful book
Life is hard. Everyone believes the world is ending all the time. But so far, all of them have been wrong.... The truth is infinitely more complicated, that we are all beautiful even as we are all part of the problem, and that to be a part of the problem is to be human.
Anthony Doerr, Cloud Cuckoo Land
Saturday, January 22, 2022
[From] a line from Roberto Bolaño’s novel Distant Star: “…as if time were not a river but an earthquake happening nearby.” It’s an arresting thought: What if time’s ravages compelled our attention with the same ineluctable force as an earthquake? What if time were experienced not as a flow but as a phenomenon whose energy overcomes you, terrifies you, forces you to reach out in search of balance?
Jonathan Mingle, The Unimaginable Touch of Time (NYRB, February 10, 2022)
Thursday, December 30, 2021
Umberto Eco on nationalism
National identity is the last bastion of the dispossessed. But the meaning of identity is now based on hatred, on hatred for those who are not the same. Hatred has to be cultivated as a civic passion…. You always want someone to hate in order to feel justified in your own misery.
Umberto Eco, The Prague Cemetery
Tuesday, December 28, 2021
Umberto Eco on religion
People are never so completely and enthusiastically evil as when they act out of religious conviction.
Umberto Eco, The Prague Cemetery