Quotes

Passages I've kept.

14 Authors 16 Books 70 Passages
The white man is very clever. He came quietly and peaceably with his religion. We were amused at his foolishness and allowed him to stay. Now he has won our brothers, and our clan can no longer act like one.
Chinua Achebe · Things Fall Apart · ch. 20, April 2026 · Legibility · cited in Apr 2026
Legibility from the receiving end.
There is no story that is not true.
Chinua Achebe · Things Fall Apart · ch. 15, April 2026 · cited in Apr 2026
Among the Ibo the art of conversation is regarded very highly, and proverbs are the palm-oil with which words are eaten.
Chinua Achebe · Things Fall Apart · Ch. 1, May 2026 · Mētis · Legibility · cited in Apr 2026
Achebe naming the linguistic register he is preserving. Mētis as language.
He has put a knife on the things that held us together and we have fallen apart.
Chinua Achebe · Things Fall Apart · Ch. 20, May 2026 · Legibility · Catastrophic simplification · cited in Apr 2026
Obierika to Okonkwo. The novel's most-quoted line — direct echo of the Yeats epigraph from which the title comes, and the mechanism of fragmentation by external administrative imposition.
The story of this man who had killed a messenger and hanged himself would make interesting reading. One could almost write a whole chapter on him. Perhaps not a whole chapter but a reasonable paragraph, at any rate. There was so much else to include, and one must be firm in cutting out details.
Chinua Achebe · Things Fall Apart · Ch. 25 (final chapter), May 2026 · Legibility · Catastrophic simplification · Self-referential compliance · cited in Apr 2026
The District Commissioner's view, in the novel's final paragraph. Okonkwo reduced to a paragraph in 'The Pacification of the Primitive Tribes of the Lower Niger.' Legibility's violence rendered as editorial casualness.
Okonkwo was well known throughout the nine villages and even beyond. His fame rested on solid personal achievements.
Chinua Achebe · Things Fall Apart · Ch. 1, opening, May 2026 · Legitimacy · Mētis · cited in Apr 2026
The novel's first sentence. Okonkwo introduced — the tragic protagonist whose self-construction in the local register cannot survive the imposed register that follows.
The universe (which others call the Library) is composed of an indefinite, perhaps infinite number of hexagonal galleries.
Jorge Luis Borges · Ficciones (The Library of Babel) · opening line, May 2026 · Completeness without hierarchy · Map vs. territory · cited in Feb 2026
Borges's iconic opening. The Library that contains everything is also the Library that contains nothing usable. Completeness without hierarchy.
There is no combination of characters one can make — dhcmrlchtdj, for example — that the divine Library has not foreseen and that in one or more of its secret tongues does not hide a terrible significance.
Jorge Luis Borges · Ficciones (The Library of Babel) · The Library of Babel, May 2026 · Completeness without hierarchy · cited in Feb 2026
Total legibility, total noise. The pathology of completeness.
The certainty that everything has already been written annuls us, or renders us phantasmal.
Jorge Luis Borges · Ficciones (The Library of Babel) · The Library of Babel, May 2026 · Completeness without hierarchy · Epistemic humility · cited in Feb 2026
Borges's epistemological conclusion. Total information defeats meaning.
The Beauty of the House is immeasurable; its Kindness infinite.
Susanna Clarke · Piranesi · p. 1, May 2026 · Map vs. territory · Completeness without hierarchy · cited in Feb 2026
The novel's first sentence. The narrator's relationship to the House as a religious one — total inhabitation of a partial world.
I am the Beloved Child of the House.
Susanna Clarke · Piranesi · passim, May 2026 · Map vs. territory · Completeness without hierarchy · cited in Feb 2026
Piranesi's identity statement before the legibility-shock of remembering who he was. The architecture has constituted the self.
Think slow, act fast: That's the secret of success.
Bent Flyvbjerg · How Big Things Get Done · ch. 1, February 2026 · Megaproject · cited in Feb 2026
Slowness is rehearsal.
The pattern was so clear that I started calling it the 'Iron Law of Megaprojects': over budget, over time, under benefits, over and over again.
Bent Flyvbjerg · How Big Things Get Done · ch. 1, February 2026 · Megaproject · cited in Feb 2026
Strategic misrepresentation is deliberate deception, and as such it is lying, per definition.
Bent Flyvbjerg · How Big Things Get Done · Ch. 2, May 2026 · Strategic misrepresentation · Optimism bias · cited in Feb 2026
Strategic misrepresentation as the political logic of cost overruns. Names the mechanism that complements optimism bias.
Whereas strategic misrepresentation is deliberate, optimism bias is nondeliberate. In the grip of optimism, people, including experts, are unaware that they are optimistic. They make decisions based on an ideal vision of the future rather than on a rational weighting of gains, losses, and probabilities. They overestimate benefits and underestimate costs.
Bent Flyvbjerg · How Big Things Get Done · Ch. 2, May 2026 · Optimism bias · Planning fallacy · cited in Feb 2026
Optimism bias defined. The cognitive complement to strategic misrepresentation.
Kahneman and Tversky dubbed these two perspectives the 'inside view' (looking at the individual project in its singularity) and the 'outside view' (looking at a project as part of a class of projects, as 'one of those'). … To produce a reliable forecast, you need the outside view.
Bent Flyvbjerg · How Big Things Get Done · Ch. 8, May 2026 · Reference class forecasting · Planning fallacy · cited in Feb 2026
Flyvbjerg's prescription. The cognitive antidote to optimism bias is the outside view.
I've waited half my life for this day!
William Golding · The Spire · Ch. 1, opening, May 2026 · Optimism bias · Spire problem · Uniqueness bias · cited in Feb 2026
Jocelin's first words, holding the model of the spire. The vision-as-life-orientation that drives the entire project — uniqueness bias and optimism bias compressed into one cry.
The foundations. I know. But God will provide.
William Golding · The Spire · Ch. 1, May 2026 · Commitment fallacy · Optimism bias · Spire problem · cited in Feb 2026
Jocelin to the chancellor, after the structural warning about the foundations. The defining line on commitment fallacy — the obstacle is named, then dismissed by faith.
The net isn't mine, Roger, and the folly isn't mine. It's God's Folly. Even in the old days he never asked men to do what was reasonable.
William Golding · The Spire · approx. Ch. 7, May 2026 · Strategic misrepresentation · Survival of the unfittest · Spire problem · cited in Feb 2026
Jocelin to Roger Mason. The reframe: what others call 'Jocelin's Folly' he calls 'God's Folly.' The mechanism by which megaprojects survive structural opposition — convert critique into vocation.
I have so much will, it puts all other business by. I am like a flower that is bearing fruit. There is a preoccupation about the flower as the fruit swells and the petals wither; a preoccupation about the whole plant, leaves dropping, everything dying but the swelling fruit.
William Golding · The Spire · approx. Ch. 5, May 2026 · Spire problem · Uniqueness bias · Custodianship · cited in Feb 2026
Jocelin's interior monologue. The vision as productive force that consumes everything around it — what custodianship looks like inverted, with everyone else reduced to soil for the project.
It's like the appletree!
William Golding · The Spire · Ch. 12 (final chapter), May 2026 · Spire problem · Map vs. territory · cited in Feb 2026
Jocelin's dying cry, the novel's last spoken line. The vision finally connected to the natural form he glimpsed late — the 'marvel' the spire was reaching toward but never was. The ambiguity of whether the project succeeded or failed compressed into one image.
There was a wall. It did not look important. It was built of uncut rocks roughly mortared. An adult could look right over it, and even a child could climb it. Where it crossed the roadway, instead of having a gate it degenerated into mere geometry, a line, an idea of boundary. But the idea was real.
Ursula K. Le Guin · The Dispossessed · Ch. 1, opening, May 2026 · System boundaries · Paradigm · cited in Dec 2025
The novel's first paragraph. The ambiguity of boundaries — physical, political, psychological — that the entire book interrogates.
To make a thief, make an owner; to create crime, create laws.
Ursula K. Le Guin · The Dispossessed · Ch. 6, May 2026 · Paradigm · Distortions · cited in Dec 2025
Anarres's propertarian critique. Odo's principle, recurring through the novel.
True journey is return.
Ursula K. Le Guin · The Dispossessed · Ch. 13, May 2026 · Paradigm · Listening systems · cited in Dec 2025
Odonian saying. Shevek's whole arc compressed into four words.
It is our suffering that brings us together. It is not love. Love does not obey the mind, and turns to hate when forced. The bond that binds us is beyond choice. We are brothers. We are brothers in what we share.
Ursula K. Le Guin · The Dispossessed · Ch. 13 — Shevek's speech, May 2026 · Interdependence · Resilience · cited in Dec 2025
Shevek to the strikers in A-Io. Le Guin on solidarity as ground rather than choice — the bond beyond choosing.
You cannot buy the Revolution. You cannot make the Revolution. You can only be the Revolution. It is in your spirit, or it is nowhere.
Ursula K. Le Guin · The Dispossessed · Ch. 12 — from Odo's writings, May 2026 · Paradigm · Listening systems · cited in Dec 2025
The most-cited line of Le Guin's political philosophy. Means are not separable from ends.
What can we ever gain in forever looking back and blaming ourselves if our lives have not turned out quite as we might have wished?
Kazuo Ishiguro · The Remains of the Day · p. 244, April 2026 · Anti-discretion · Bureaucratic reabsorption · cited in May 2026
Stevens's quiet rationalisation, near the end. The professional being closes again.
'Dignity' has to do crucially with a butler's ability not to abandon the professional being he inhabits. Lesser butlers will abandon their professional being for the private one at the least provocation. For such persons, being a butler is like playing some pantomime role; a small push, a slight stumble, and the facade will drop off to reveal the actor underneath. The great butlers are great by virtue of their ability to inhabit their professional role and inhabit it to the utmost; they will not be shaken out by external events, however surprising, alarming or vexing.
Kazuo Ishiguro · The Remains of the Day · Day Two — Morning, May 2026 · Anti-discretion · Legibility · Legitimacy · cited in May 2026
Stevens's definition. Anti-discretion as the constitutive principle of the professional self.
Lord Darlington wasn't a bad man. He wasn't a bad man at all. And at least he had the privilege of being able to say at the end of his life that he made his own mistakes. His lordship was a courageous man. He chose a certain path in life, it proved to be a misguided one, but there, he chose it, he can say that at least. As for myself, I cannot even claim that. You see, I trusted. I trusted in his lordship's wisdom. All those years I served him, I trusted I was doing something worthwhile. I can't even say I made my own mistakes. Really — one has to ask oneself — what dignity is there in that?
Kazuo Ishiguro · The Remains of the Day · p. 243, May 2026 · Anti-discretion · Legitimacy · Bureaucratic reabsorption · cited in May 2026
Stevens's confession on the pier. The closest he comes to recognising the discretion he refused to acknowledge — and the cost of that refusal.
Indeed — why should I not admit it? — at that moment, my heart was breaking.
Kazuo Ishiguro · The Remains of the Day · p. 239, May 2026 · Anti-discretion · Legitimacy · cited in May 2026
The closest Stevens comes to feeling without disowning the feeling.
You've got to enjoy yourself. The evening's the best part of the day. You've done your day's work. Now you can put your feet up and enjoy it. That's how I look at it. Ask anybody, they'll all tell you. The evening's the best part of the day.
Kazuo Ishiguro · The Remains of the Day · p. 244, May 2026 · Bureaucratic reabsorption · cited in May 2026
Spoken by the man on the pier, not by Stevens. The line that names the novel's title and its rhythm — and that Stevens, characteristically, takes as advice rather than as elegy.
Miss Kenton, I will ask you not to excite yourself and to conduct yourself in a manner befitting your position. This is a very straightforward matter. If his lordship wishes these particular contracts to be discontinued, then there is little more to be said.
Kazuo Ishiguro · The Remains of the Day · Day Two — Afternoon, May 2026 · Anti-discretion · Legibility · Self-referential compliance · cited in May 2026
Stevens to Miss Kenton, on dismissing Ruth and Sarah for being Jewish. The voice of someone reading aloud from a manual.
This is the stomach of the man this story is about. He has cancer of the stomach, but he is not yet aware of it. He has been merely passing the time, killing it, you might say. This is not how to be alive.
Akira Kurosawa · Ikiru · Opening narration, May 2026 · Bureaucratic reabsorption · Anti-discretion · cited in May 2026
Narration over the X-ray. Establishes that Watanabe is already dead — in the second sentence of the film. Wording per Donald Richie / Criterion subtitles; may vary by release.
Life is brief, fall in love, maidens, before the crimson bloom fades from your lips, before the tides of passion cool within you, for those of you who know no tomorrow.
Akira Kurosawa · Ikiru · Final scene — Watanabe on the swing, May 2026 · Discretion · Bureaucratic reabsorption · cited in May 2026
'Gondola no Uta' (lyrics: Isamu Yoshii, music: Shinpei Nakayama, 1915). Watanabe sings it twice — first in the nightclub on the night of his diagnosis, then on the swing in the snow as he dies.
I make these silly little toys. But when I'm doing it, I feel as though I were friends with all the children of Japan.
Akira Kurosawa · Ikiru · Mid-film — Watanabe with Toyo, May 2026 · Discretion · Policy at the point of contact · cited in May 2026
Toyo's offhand explanation of why making mechanical toy rabbits matters. The line that gives Watanabe the permission structure to push the petition. Subtitle translation approximate.
Of course, the parks section did the actual construction work. But it was we who actually built the park. There was tremendous opposition from the residents. We had to fight them tooth and nail.
Akira Kurosawa · Ikiru · Wake scene, May 2026 · Bureaucratic reabsorption · Self-referential compliance · cited in May 2026
The deputy mayor at the wake, claiming credit for what Watanabe quietly accomplished. Bureaucratic reabsorption rendered without commentary. Subtitle translation approximate.
He didn't drink. He didn't take bribes. He didn't have any hobbies. He was just doing his job. That's what changed at the end. He realised what his job was.
Akira Kurosawa · Ikiru · Wake scene — final outburst, May 2026 · Discretion · Bureaucratic reabsorption · Self-referential compliance · cited in May 2026
The young clerk's drunken outburst at the wake — the film's only direct argument. The morning after, the same clerk faces a petitioner, hesitates, and routes them away; the bureaucracy reabsorbs him. Subtitle translation approximate.
Street-level bureaucrats develop conceptions of their work and of their clients that narrow the gap between their personal and work limitations and the service ideal.
Michael Lipsky · Street-Level Bureaucracy · p. xii, April 2026 · Coping mechanisms · Self-referential compliance · Legibility · cited in May 2026
The mechanism by which the worker stops registering the gap — Lipsky's 'corrupted world of service'.
The decisions of street-level bureaucrats, the routines they establish, and the devices they invent to cope with uncertainties and work pressures, effectively become the public policies they carry out.
Michael Lipsky · Street-Level Bureaucracy · Ch. 1, May 2026 · Street-level bureaucracy · Policy at the point of contact · Discretion · cited in May 2026
The thesis. Public policy is what arrives at the point of contact, not what was passed in the legislature.
Public policy is not best understood as made in legislatures or top-floor suites of high-ranking administrators. … To the mix of places where policies are made, one must add the crowded offices and daily encounters of street-level workers.
Michael Lipsky · Street-Level Bureaucracy · Ch. 1, May 2026 · Street-level bureaucracy · Policy at the point of contact · cited in May 2026
The architectural claim — where policy is actually made.
Resources are chronically inadequate relative to the tasks workers are asked to perform. The demand for services tends to increase to meet the supply. Goal expectations for the agencies in which they work tend to be ambiguous, vague, or conflicting. Performance oriented toward goal achievement tends to be difficult if not impossible to measure. Clients are typically nonvoluntary; partly as a result, clients for the most part do not serve as primary bureaucratic reference groups.
Michael Lipsky · Street-Level Bureaucracy · Ch. 3, May 2026 · Street-level bureaucracy · Demand-supply spiral · Coping mechanisms · cited in May 2026
The five structural conditions that make rule-following impossible. Lipsky's diagnostic skeleton — these are not failures of management, they are constitutive of street-level work.
A certain degree of looking-the-other-way on the part of supervisors may be considered necessary to persuade officers to risk assault.
Michael Lipsky · Street-Level Bureaucracy · Ch. 3, May 2026 · Discretion · Self-referential compliance · cited in May 2026
The agency depending in practice on what it forbids in policy. The most uncomfortable line in the book.
On the one hand, the work is often highly scripted to achieve policy objectives that have their origins in the political process. On the other hand, the work requires improvisation and responsiveness to the individual case.
Michael Lipsky · Street-Level Bureaucracy · Ch. 1, May 2026 · Discretion · Coping mechanisms · cited in May 2026
The essential paradox — both true, neither honourable. The contradiction the worker carries.
You have to carry the fire. I don't know how to. Yes you do. It's inside you. It was always there. I can see it.
Cormac McCarthy · The Road · p. 234, March 2026 · Resilience · cited in Mar 2026
Resilience is what gets handed down.
He knew only that the child was his warrant. He said: If he is not the word of God God never spoke.
Cormac McCarthy · The Road · p. 5, March 2026 · cited in Mar 2026
Once there were brook trout in the streams in the mountains. You could see them standing in the amber current where the white edges of their fins wimpled softly in the flow. They smelled of moss in your hand. Polished and muscular and torsional. On their backs were vermiculate patterns that were maps of the world in its becoming. Maps and mazes. Of a thing which could not be put back. Not be made right again. In the deep glens where they lived all things were older than man and they hummed of mystery.
Cormac McCarthy · The Road · p. 286 (final paragraph), May 2026 · Resilience · Custodianship · cited in Mar 2026
The novel's final paragraph. McCarthy's elegy for what cannot be carried back. Iconic.
What's the bravest thing you ever did? He spat in the road a bloody phlegm. Getting up this morning, he said.
Cormac McCarthy · The Road · approx. mid-novel, May 2026 · Resilience · Adaptive capacity · cited in Mar 2026
Resilience as the daily act of standing up under conditions that argue against it.
He turned and looked at the boy. Maybe he understood for the first time that to the boy he was himself an alien. A being from a planet that no longer existed. The tales of which were suspect.
Cormac McCarthy · The Road · approx. mid-novel, May 2026 · Custodianship · Institutional scaffolding · cited in Mar 2026
The man as alien to his own son. The post-catastrophe parent without a culture to hand down — the breakdown of institutional scaffolding at the smallest possible scale.
You think that because you understand 'one' that you must therefore understand 'two' because one and one make two. But you forget that you must also understand 'and'.
Donella Meadows · Thinking in Systems · p. 14, December 2025 · Systems thinking · cited in Dec 2025
Meadows quoting a Sufi proverb. The 'and' is where governance fails.
The least obvious part of the system, its function or purpose, is often the most crucial determinant of the system's behavior.
Donella Meadows · Thinking in Systems · p. 16, December 2025 · Systems thinking · cited in Dec 2025
Self-organizing, nonlinear, feedback systems are inherently unpredictable. They are not controllable. They are understandable only in the most general way. The goal of foreseeing the future exactly and preparing for it perfectly is unrealizable.
Donella Meadows · Thinking in Systems · p. 167, May 2026 · Systems thinking · Epistemic humility · Resilience · cited in Dec 2025
Meadows's epistemological humility. The complement to her leverage-points list — even when you find them, you cannot fully control.
Hierarchical systems evolve from the bottom up. The purpose of the upper layers of the hierarchy is to serve the purposes of the lower layers.
Donella Meadows · Thinking in Systems · p. 83, May 2026 · Systems thinking · Leverage points · cited in Dec 2025
Meadows's inversion of the conventional governance picture. Hierarchies exist to serve the lower levels, not the reverse.
There are no separate systems. The world is a continuum. Where to draw a boundary around a system depends on the purpose of the discussion.
Donella Meadows · Thinking in Systems · Ch. 4, May 2026 · System boundaries · Systems thinking · cited in Dec 2025
System boundaries as choice, not discovery. The single most consequential epistemic move in the book.
Magical leverage points are not easily accessible, even if we know where they are and which direction to push on them. There are no cheap tickets to mastery.
Donella Meadows · Thinking in Systems · p. 165, May 2026 · Leverage points · Epistemic humility · cited in Dec 2025
The leverage-points list ends here, in difficulty rather than in technique.
Bureaucracies are not merely tools — they are also frameworks for the perceptual and cognitive work of organizations.
Charles Perrow · Complex Organizations · p. 145, January 2026 · Legibility · High modernism · cited in Apr 2026
Perrow's earlier book. Bureaucracy as cognition — bridges the safety-and-systems essays into the legibility argument.
We have produced designs so complicated that we cannot anticipate all the possible interactions of the inevitable failures.
Charles Perrow · Normal Accidents · p. 11, March 2026 · Normal accident · Tight coupling · cited in Jan 2026
The clearest one-sentence statement of the thesis.
Most high-risk systems have some special characteristics that make accidents in them inevitable, even 'normal'.
Charles Perrow · Normal Accidents · p. 3, January 2026 · Normal accident · cited in Jan 2026
'Normal' as statistical, not moral.
The trick is to design a system that fails gracefully, in ways its operators can recognize and reverse.
Charles Perrow · Normal Accidents · p. 332, January 2026 · Resilience · cited in Jan 2026
Some systems we have built, are building, or are contemplating building have catastrophic potential, will inevitably suffer accidents of catastrophic potential, and should be abandoned.
Charles Perrow · Normal Accidents · Ch. 9 — Conclusion, May 2026 · Normal accident · System accident · cited in Jan 2026
Perrow's strongest moral conclusion. Some systems should not exist. The most-controversial line in the book.
Interactive complexity refers to the presence of unfamiliar sequences, or unplanned and unexpected sequences, and either not visible or not immediately comprehensible.
Charles Perrow · Normal Accidents · Ch. 3, May 2026 · Interactive complexity · System accident · cited in Jan 2026
Definition of interactive complexity. The first half of the normal-accident architecture.
Tight coupling is a mechanical engineering term meaning there is no slack or buffer or give between two items. What happens in one directly affects what happens in the other.
Charles Perrow · Normal Accidents · Ch. 3, May 2026 · Tight coupling · System accident · cited in Jan 2026
Tight coupling defined. The second half of the architecture.
The builders of the modern nation-state do not merely describe, observe, and map; they strive to shape a people and landscape that will fit their techniques of observation.
James C. Scott · Seeing Like a State · p. 82, April 2026 · Legibility · cited in Apr 2026
Legibility is a forcing function, not passive observation.
Designed or planned social order is necessarily schematic; it always ignores essential features of any real, functioning social order.
James C. Scott · Seeing Like a State · p. 6, April 2026 · Legibility · cited in Apr 2026
Such knowledge is particular, by definition; it can be acquired only by local practice and experience.
James C. Scott · Seeing Like a State · ch. 9, April 2026 · Legibility · cited in Apr 2026
Mētis is the residue legibility cannot capture.
Metis represents a wide array of practical skills and acquired intelligence in responding to a constantly changing natural and human environment.
James C. Scott · Seeing Like a State · Ch. 9, May 2026 · Mētis · Legibility · cited in Apr 2026
Mētis defined. The Greek term for the knowledge that escapes legibility because it is local and practiced.
Officials of the modern state are, of necessity, at least one step—and often several steps—removed from the society they are charged with governing. They assess the life of their society by a series of typifications that are always some distance from the full reality these abstractions are meant to capture.
James C. Scott · Seeing Like a State · Ch. 2, May 2026 · Legibility · High modernism · cited in Apr 2026
The structural distance between governing classification and governed reality.
Domination of Thailand and Burma was justified, in part, by the alleged anarchy of those who had successfully evaded state control.
James C. Scott · The Art of Not Being Governed · p. 22, April 2026 · Legibility · High modernism · cited in Apr 2026
Scott's later book. Anarchy as the state's projection — the unread populations characterised as ungoverned because they are unreadable.
Anticipation seeks to preserve stability by predicting and preventing disturbances. Resilience seeks to preserve stability by reacting to disturbances after they occur.
Aaron Wildavsky · Searching for Safety · p. 77, March 2026 · Resilience · cited in Mar 2026
The pivot. Wildavsky's whole argument runs on this distinction.
Trial without error is impossible. The question is what kind of errors a system can survive.
Aaron Wildavsky · Searching for Safety · p. 38, March 2026 · Resilience · cited in Mar 2026
The richer countries are also the safer countries. Wealth provides the resources for adaptive response — the surplus that lets a society try things, fail, and try again.
Aaron Wildavsky · Searching for Safety · Ch. 4, May 2026 · Resilience · Adaptive capacity · Surplus capacity · cited in Mar 2026
Wildavsky's empirical core. Capacity for trial-and-error correlates with safety outcomes. Wording paraphrased.