
We often think that when we have completed our study of one we know all about two, because ‘two’ is ‘one and one’. We forget that we have still to make a study of ‘and’.
— Arthur Eddington, The Nature of the Physical World, 1928

We often think that when we have completed our study of one we know all about two, because ‘two’ is ‘one and one’. We forget that we have still to make a study of ‘and’.
— Arthur Eddington, The Nature of the Physical World, 1928
“A conference is a gathering of important people who singly can do nothing, but together can decide that nothing can be done.” — Fred Allen
“Jottings” from the notebooks of Bulgarian novelist Elias Canetti, published as The Human Province (1978):
“Square tables: the self-assurance they give you, as though one were alone in an alliance of four.”

Robert Runcie, Archbishop of Canterbury, cooperated as Humphrey Carpenter prepared his biography, believing that the book wouldn’t be published until after his passing. Eventually he was forced to write,
My dear Humphrey
I have done my best to die before this book is published. It now seems possible that I may not succeed. Since you know that I am not enthusiastic about it you are generous to give me space for a postscript.

“Who knows if Shakespear might not have thought less, if he had read more?” — Edward Young

“The other day we had a long discourse with [Lady Orkney] about love; and she told us a saying … which I thought excellent, that in men, desire begets love, and in women, love begets desire.” — Jonathan Swift, A Journal to Stella, Oct. 30, 1712
Asked whether he could summarize the lessons of history in a short book, Columbia historian Charles Beard said he could do it in four sentences:

“No general proposition is worth a damn.” — Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. (a general proposition)
“I find much the best way of getting on in society is never to be able to understand why anybody is to be disapproved of.” — Augustus J.C. Hare, quoting “a son of Canon Blakesly”
Aphorisms from Austin O’Malley’s Keystones of Thought, 1914:
“A little learning striving to explain a great subject is like an attempt to light up a cathedral with a single taper, which does no more than to show for an instant one foolish face.”