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Quotes About Complexity

the author's judgment is always present, always evident to anyone who knows how to look for it. Whether its particular forms are harmful or serviceable is always a complex question, a question that cannot be settled by any easy reference to abstract rules. As we begin now to deal with this question, we must never forget that though the author can to some extent choose his disguises, he can never choose to disappear.
~ Wayne C. Booth
A painting is more than the sum of its parts.
~ Wendelin Van Draanen
Él se limitó a sonreír y dijo—: Algunos de nosotros tenemos un acabado mate, otros satinado, otros esmaltado.... —él se volvió hacia mí—. Pero de vez en cuando conoces a alguien que es iridiscente, y cuando ocurre, no hay nada comparable.
~ Wendelin Van Draanen
If the devil doesn't exist... how do you explain that some people are a lot worse than they're smart enough to be?
~ Wendell Berry
A farmer, as one of his farmer correspondents once wrote to Liberty Hyde Bailey, is a dispenser of the 'Mysteries of God.' The husband, unlike the manager or the would-be objective scientist, belongs inherently to the complexity and the mystery that is to be husbanded, and so the husbanding mind is both careful and humble.
~ Wendell Berry
You cannot slander human nature; it is worse than words can paint it.
~ Charles Haddon Spurgeon
Computers rather frighten me, because I never did learn to type, so the whole thing seems extraordinarily complicated to me.
~ Charles Keating
When we think or act this way, we do so at either one extreme or the other. For example, either we love someone completely or we hate them. There is no middle ground. We see the people around us as either good or bad, and not the composite they really are. We judge ourselves equally as harshly. The more we use all-or-none thinking, the more it opens us up to behaving in an all-or-none fashion. Both of these actions tend to get us into trouble and to cause us to suffer unnecessarily.
~ Charles L. Whitfield
Love is not knowing what you're talking about.
~ Charles M. Schulz
Snowflakes fascinate me... Millions of them falling gently to the ground... And they say that no two of them are alike! Each one completely different from all the others... The last of the rugged individualists!
~ Charles M. Schulz
It's complicated." "Yeah? Welcome to Earth. Everything here is complicated.
~ Charles Martin
Puzzles forced me to look at something from several angles before I moved on, to look again, and again, and possibly again because each piece—no matter how small or seemingly insignificant—was critical to the whole.
~ Charles Martin
Making the simple complicated is commonplace; making the complicated simple, awesomely simple, that's creative.
~ Charles Mingus
Creativity is more than just being different. Anybody can plan weird; that's easy. What's hard is to be as simple as Bach. Making the simple, awesomely simple, that's creativity.
~ Charles Mingus
Creativity is more than just being different. Anybody can play weird-- that's easy. What's hard is to be as simple as Bach. Making the simple complicated is commonplace--making the complicated simple, awesomely simple--that's creativity.
~ Charles Mingus
Anyone can make the simple complicated. Creativity is making the complicated simple.
~ Charles Mingus
Anybody can make the simple complecated. Creativity is making the complecated simple.
~ Charles Mingus
Making the simple complicated is commonplace; making the complicated simple, awesomely simple, that's creativity.
~ Charles Mingus
There is no single answer to any problem in the city. The solution comes from a multiplicity of answers.'"*
~ Charles Montgomery
I said: I don't ever find people uninteresting. On the contrary, I find them so fascinating and so highly-flavoured that after small helpings, I have to go away and chew them slowly and analyse the taste of them.
~ Charles Palliser
For you know that I myself am a labyrinth, where one easily gets lost.
~ Charles Perrault
Edwards continues by arguing that all this automation has not reduced the workload of the pilot a great deal; instead, it has increased the operational effectiveness of the system.
~ Charles Perrow
If interactive complexity and tight coupling—system characteristics—inevitably will produce an accident, I believe we are justified in calling it a normal accident, or a system accident.
~ Charles Perrow
Code is not like other how-computers-work books. It doesn't have big color illustrations of disk drives with arrows showing how the data sweeps into the computer. Code has no drawings of trains carrying a cargo of zeros and ones. Metaphors and similes are wonderful literary devices but they do nothing but obscure the beauty of technology.
~ Charles Petzold