21 JUN 2012 by ideonexus

 Verbosity is Like a Cuttlefish

A multitude of words doth rather obscure than illustrate, they being a burden to the memory, and the first apt to be forgotten, before we come to the last. So that he that uses many words for the explaining of any subject, doth, like the cuttle-fish, hide himself, for the most part, in his own ink.
Folksonomies: verbosity
Folksonomies: verbosity
  1  notes

Hiding meaning in its own ink.

19 APR 2011 by ideonexus

 Galileo Defends Nature as Truth

It is necessary for the Bible, in order to be accommodated to the understanding of every man, to speak many things which appear to differ from the absolute truth so far as the bare meaning of the words is concerned. But Nature, on the other hand, is inexorable and immutable; she never transgresses the laws imposed upon her, or cares a whit whether her abstruse reasons and methods of operation are understandable to men. For that reason it appears that nothing physical which sense­experience se...
  1  notes

Explaining why the Bible must be contradictory at times, he reveres nature as the word of God.