Quote of the Day
If you enjoy programming, philosophy, math, or any number of geeky topics, you're in the right place. Every day, I'll post a random quote from my extensive collection of Kindle highlights. Quotes do not necessarily reflect my views or opinions. In fact, part of my epistemic process is to consume a wide variety of contradictory material.
06/24/2026
The ancient, esoteric piece of wisdom he gleaned from his prison years was this: unrestrained power over people makes you cruel! Those placed in a position of power over another person (the informer over the informed upon, the interrogator over the interrogated, the high-ranking trusty over the general laborer), in which they have no cause to fear any negative consequences from doing him violence, unavoidably act on their evil desires—when it is to their advantage (or when the mood strikes them)—unless they restrain themselves morally. And “the cruelty they manifest,” writes Solzhenitsyn, “is proportionate to the defenselessness of the person in their power.” By means of repeated cruel actions over time, cruelty becomes second-nature to them, a stable and durable trait of their personalities.
— Roman Gelperin, On Rotting Prison Straw
06/23/2026
Letting go of your fear of imperfection doesn’t mean you can become sloppy. Sloppy authors rarely get published—but perfect authors never do.
— Gerald M. Weinberg, Fiona Charles, Keats Kirsch, Dani Weinberg, and Earl Everett, Weinberg on Writing
06/22/2026
…contemporary stories that are explicitly about violence have a tendency to also become stories about bureaucracy, since, after all, most acts of extreme violence either take place in bureaucratic environments (armies, prisons …) or else, they are almost immediately surrounded by bureaucratic procedures (crime).
— David Graeber, The Utopia of Rules
06/21/2026
If you’ve got decent people under you, there is probably nothing you can do to improve their chances of success more dramatically than to get yourself out of their hair occasionally.
— Tom DeMarco and Tim Lister, Peopleware
2255 post articles, 451 pages.