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stranger
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Hi! First post.
I love the quotations almost as much as the words. They often are the beginning of my musings for the day.
Today's: You talk when you cease to be at peace with your thoughts. -Khalil Gibran, mystic, poet, and artist (1883-1931).
The Accidental Tourist completely undermines the credibility of this statement. The relationship with his wife made a great impression on me. She was drawn to him because he didn't talk much. This gave him an aura of mystery and profundity. He didn't speak because he was shy and uncertain.
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enthusiast
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enthusiast
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"You talk when you cease to be at peace with your thoughts."
that strikes me as pretentious and silly. i talk when I need to communicate with other people because i am not telepathic nor are any of the the people with whom I need to communicate.
Some for renown, on scraps of learning dote, /And think they grow immortal as they quote. Edward Young (1683 - 1765)
A facility for quotation covers the absence of original thought. Dorothy L. Sayers (1893 - 1957)
A question about English usage - does posting quotes that mock the use of quotations count as irony?
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Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
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A question about English usage - does posting quotes that mock the use of quotations count as irony?
I would say it does in the US. I can't speak for other dialects of English, the speakers of which think USns don't do irony because we call it something else.
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stranger
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Latishya, beautiful script for your icon. Are they two different scripts? What does it mean?
'A facility for quotation covers the absence of original thought.' Is true to an extent, but it also means that the quoter is making connections with previous thinkers. Our thought is based on a lifetime of absorbing, accepting or rejecting, the thoughts of others. However, to use a quotation to prove a point or end an argument is lazy.
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Carpal Tunnel
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Welcome. Most of the time quotations have made their way around because they prove a point in the shortest, most adaquate and often witty way. Gibran in this case may not deliver a universal thruth, but are there any of those? For mystics the quote may count.
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Latishya, beautiful script for your icon. Are they two different scripts? What does it mean? It is the same phrase written twice. It says "qawwali Hamesha" or "Qawwali forever". The first reads left to right and is in devanagari, the script used for Hindi (also for Marathi, Nepali, Sanskrit and others). The other reads from right to left and is Nastaliq, one of two variants of the Arabic alphabet used for Urdu. The other is Naksh. I cannot vouch for the accuracy of the Nastaliq as I don't read or write Urdu. I am planning to correct this because I think that Nastaliq is beautiful.
Last edited by latishya; 10/26/09 07:44 PM.
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cross-threading a bit, The sayings of the wise are like goads; like fixed spikes are the topics given by one collector. Ecclessiaties 12:11
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;-) Thanks for the new word 'goad'. To prodd a goat with a goad? The second part of the quote is well.. maybe I'll understand later.
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old hand
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maybe I'll understand later.
Like fixed spikes Like nails driven firmly into wood
given by one collector From one source/person
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veteran
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"I have gathered a posie of other men’s flowers, and nothing but the thread that binds them is mine own." -- John Bartlett, if one believes Bartleby.com or Michel de Montaigne, otherwise.
Quotations can emphasize an idea or restate it pithily or to set the stage for a chapter. This sort of quote is often used in textbooks, as well as in popular books to introduce scholarly topics to the lay public. For example, I'm in my office at work now and the first book I pick up is "Principles of Artificial Intelligence" by Joscha Bach. I have not read this book yet, but it is here on the shelf waiting for me. I turn to the start of a random chapter somewhere in the middle, and I find a quote from John McCarthy (among the first AI researchers).
At other times they convey irony directly (or indirectly in the manner the quote is juxtaposed by quoter). I cannot recall a specific instance of seeing this sort of quote and only have the vaguest sense that I must have seen such a thing once or twice. Even if this fuzzy recollection is not a confabulation, this sort of quotation must be relatively rare in comparison to the other kinds.
Sometimes quotes are misused or misapplied. Quotes are termed "out of context" when, for example, they are cited in such a manner as to indicate a point other than that intended by the original author. One is led to believe that lawyers are fond of this. Often quotes out of context are used to make it appear that the person quoted has espoused something exactly contrary to what he attempts to convey. (Example: attempts to show that Darwin believed the eye could not possibly have evolved or that the fossil record disproved evolution.)
In other cases, quotes are used like slogans. We all agree that Mr. A is a wise man. Mr. A said X is true. Therefore, X is true, because he was a wise man. I will give no example of this, but I can think of several as I type this. In many cases, like this quotes can become slogans or "talking points." I suppose G. Lakoff would say that these quote /slogans are successful examples of "framing."
Scholarly works often use quotes rather than a mere citation or reference to another person's work. Maybe the wording seems so clear that the borrowing author doesn't want to spoil the original intent.
A critique or review, though, might quote every line or couplet of a poem to dissect it in the body of text.
Quotations can be used in lieu of thinking, or even to obviate thinking, or they can be used to focus or direct thinking.
I don't see how quoting can be a bad or a good thing any more than writing itself is a bad or a good thing. Rather, there are good an bad examples of each.
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