http://tenniselbow.org/scott/feyn_surely.pdfSisifo wrote:Gice me biographies, people! Wikipedia is to a story, like a roastbeef recipe is to a roastbeef!!

http://tenniselbow.org/scott/feyn_surely.pdfSisifo wrote:Gice me biographies, people! Wikipedia is to a story, like a roastbeef recipe is to a roastbeef!!
Have to confess, have not read it, merely flicked through, but it looks pretty comprehensive. Believe was intended to be 2 volumes but only the first one was ever written.Sisifo wrote:Also, what's your opinion of the Book of the Sword, it is actually the one I would like to know if it is worth?
Such a shame he ended the way he did.Clinton Huxley wrote:Someone I'd like to know more about and would certainly qualify as a hero would be Alan Turing. I'd be typing in German now were it not for him, probably.
Clinton Huxley wrote:Someone I'd like to know more about and would certainly qualify as a hero would be Alan Turing. I'd be typing in German now were it not for him, probably.
"One of the most irrational of all the conventions of modern society is the one to the effect that religious opinions should be respected. It is largely to blame, I suspect, for the slowness with which sound ideas are disseminated in the world. The minute a new one bobs up some faction or other of theologians falls upon it furiously, seeking to put it down. The most effective way to defend it, of course, would be to fall upon the theologians, for the only really useful defense is an all-out offensive. But the convention aforesaid protects them, and so they proceed with their blather unwhipped and almost unmolested, to the great damage of common sense and common decency. That they should have this immunity is an outrage. There is nothing in religious ideas, as a class, to lift them above other ideas. On the contrary, they are always dubious and often quite silly. Nor is there any visible intellectual dignity in theologians. Few of them know anything that is worth knowing, and not many of them are even honest."
Do; it's excellentEpictetus wrote:Henry Louis Mencken (see his Chrestomathy and Minority Report). As for biography's, there's one called The Skeptic: A Life of H. L. Mencken by Terry Teachout (I have yet to read it myself).
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