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Quotes About Elucidation

When you say 'plugged it in,' could you please tell me everything you plugged into it?" Peter had now dropped, improbably, into a polite, clinical mode, like a customer service rep in a Bangalore cubicle farm.
~ Neal Stephenson
As inquiry, the Warren Commission's work resembles a dead whale decomposing on a beach. Yet, one does not have to view the work in this fashion. For two generations of Americans, the Warren Commission's twenty-six volumes of Hearings and Exhibits have become a species of Talmudic text begging for commentary and further elucidation. To
~ Norman Mailer
The story itself, the true story, is the one that the audience members create in their minds, guided and shaped by my text, but then transformed, elucidated, expanded, edited, and clarified by their own experience, their own desires, their own hopes and fears.
~ Orson Scott Card
Actually it's very simple, but simple things are always the hardest to explain.
~ David Eddings
The only contribution of any value a private citizen can make towards the elucidation of a National upheaval is to record his own sensations.
~ Jerome K. Jerome
You have to bring books to explain your work.
~ Kehinde Wiley
The other problem with Brother Ibrhm ad-Din Shukrallah, the biggest problem perhaps, was his great affection for tautology. Though he promised explanation, elucidation, and exposition, linguistically he put one in mind of a dog chasing its own tail: "Now there are many types of warfare . . . I will name a few. Chemical warfare is the warfare where them men kill each other chemically with warfare.
~ Zadie Smith
Describing something helps to define it, to give it limits, to set guardrails of understanding around it.
~ Jim Butcher
as though if I looked hard enough, there would be revealed in the grain or the watermark of the paper itself the elucidation of the mystery.
~ Diane Setterfield
blows and shouts being indeed no more than expressions of the confused ideas which exhilarated me, and which, not being developed to the point at which they might rest exposed to the light of day, rather than submit to a slow and difficult course of elucidation, found it easier and more pleasant to drift into an immediate outlet.
~ Marcel Proust
To ask for an explanation is to explain the obscure by the more obscure.
~ Maurice Merleau-Ponty