The choice of an imagined future is always a matter of taste . . I see human freedom as the goal and the creativity of small human societies as the means to achieve it.
Freedom is the divine spark that causes human children to rebel against grand unified theories imposed by their parents.
The choice of a vision of the present is always a matter of taste. With non-stop belligerent entertainment as the unified theory of the day, one turns with gratitude to the prospect of a weekend with the correspondences of a shimmering mentality.
A frequent contributor to The New York Review,
Dyson laid out the stakes for the foregoing im-
plication - that the mind most necessary to cri-
tique is one's own - in a deeply well-informed
by Wittgenstein's leading biographer. (Kai Bird,
author of the review cited here of Dyson's let-
ters, wrote another one). Against the prodigious
negative pressure of the day, to critique the un-
ruly mentality of misrule in the nation, then and
now, Dyson presented a devastating depiction of
the cost the embattled path imposed on a stronger
mind than most - and the rôle of companionship -
[His wife} came to me with a cry for help. She
implored me to collaborate with Robert in a piece
of technical scientific work. She said Robert was
desperate because he was no longer doing science,
and he needed a collaborator to get him started ..
His days as a scientist were over. It was too
late to cure his anguish with equations.
iv Joe Collier
v Oliver Houlby
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