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Carlo Rovelli, "There Are Places in the World Where Rules Are Less Important Than Kindness" 에서책 읽는 즐거움 2022. 9. 19. 11:39
이론물리학자 Carlo Rovelli 의 물리학, 철학, 그리고 세상에 관한
46편의 에세이를 모은 이 책에서 (앞에 올린 "Thank You, Stephen",
"De rerum natura", "Are We Free?" 에 더해) 임의로 몇 구절 더
인용한다.
Nabokov himself has written: "A writer should have the precision of
a poet and the imagination of a scientist." ... In 1948, in a passage
inserted into Speak, Memory, one of the most celebrated literary
biographies of the twentieth century, Nabokov writes in his luxurient,
exacting prose: When a butterfly has to look like a leaf, not only are
all the details of a leaf beautifully rendered but markings mimicking
grub-bored holes are generously thrown in.... I discovered in nature
the nonutilitarian delights that I sought in art. (pp. 11-12)
De Finetti's significance lies in the fact that he understood how
we can have a shared and reliable knowledge without absolute
certainties. His insight was that the subjective character of
probability and the probabilistic aspect of knowledge are not in
contradiction with the fact that we can converge to reliable
knowledge. The key that makes this poissble is a subtle
theorem that we owe to ... Thomas Bayes. Bayes' theorem
shows two things. First, how every new piece of empirical
evidence modifies the probability of beliefs. Second, and
crucially, that these modifications lead our beliefs to converge,
even if they are different to begin with. (p. 54)
But it is at precisely this point that national identity becomes an
obstacle to larger scale cooperation. Forged in order to reduce
internal conflicts, it ends up provoking external ones that are
even more damaging. (p. 107)
There is only one scientist who has won two Nobel Prizes for
work in two different sciences, and she is a woman, Maria
Skłodowska Curie.... Her clashes with the bigotry, obtruseness,
and downright stupidity of patriotism and "defense against
foreigners," her unstintingly serious gaze, the richness of her
scientific legacy and the clarity and generosity of her life have
remained examplary. Albert Einstein said of her that she was
the only person never to be corrupted by fame. (p. 114, 116)
But the idea that the science closest to religion is psychology,
coming from a Catholic priest [Georges Lemaître] who has
thought deeply about the connection between religion and
science, is still a surprizing one. Surprizing, but to my mind,
also revealing. (p. 125)
The aggressive diatribes of Pope pius XII against religious liberty,
against the freedom of the press, against liberty of conscince, are
examples that I suppose the current Church must find
embarrassing. (p. 127)
[Giacomo] Leopardi is seeking nourishment for his soul, and he
finds it in what we know about this vast world: in science, in
astronomy.... The primary source, as much for his intellectual
clarity as a poet as for the enchanted way in which he looks at
the world, was the fact that he had made contemporary scintific
knowledge deeply his own, beginning with astronomy, the mother
of science.... And his poetry continues to resonate with us, telling
us that life, despite the "infinite vanity of things," is also an
enchantment. As in his most famous line, "it is sweet to me to be
shipwrecked in this sea." (pp. 133-4)
Naturalism without Mrrors is a complex book in which one of the
most brillant contemporary philosophers, Huw Price ... discusses
a version of what it would be no exaggeration to call the dominant
philosophy of our time: naturalism.... Price calls it the "problem of
placement," and formulate it as the question of where to "place"
in the world of natural sciences things such as moral values,
beauty, consciousness, truth, ..., laws, and so on.... To interpret
our sophisticated and complex linguistic activities as affirmations
of external reality is a basic error that, according to Price,
generates the false problem of placement.... There is anther
possibility: to understand them as aspects of our own behavior
as complex natural beings in a complex natural world.
(p. 149-150) [Review: Naturalism without Mirrors]
Perhaps in a curious way, transprting ourselves back to our
natural reality ... ends up bringing us closer to the intuitions of
Nietzsche ...: before being a rational animal, man is a vital
animal -- "It is our needs that interpret the world." (p. 151)
This fear is explicit in Mein Kampf; this feeling of inferiority,
this sense of being surrounded by imminent danger. The
reason behind the need to dominate others derives from a
terror of being dominated by them. The reason for preferring
combat to collaboration is that we fear the strengh of
others. (p. 160)
Penrose is a polyhedral intellectual. Readers know him for
several books, among them the dense and wonderful
The Roads to Reality, a great panorama of contemporary
physics and mathematics, a popular work that is not easy
and that shines with intelligence and profundity on every
page. (p. 187)
Our intuition balks at the immense numbers and the
endless variety generated by combinations.... It is for
this reason, I believe, that it seems inconceivable that
things as complex as life, or our own thought, can
emerge from simple things: because we instinctively
underestimate simple things. (p. 214)
I don't trust those who are good for the sake of pleasing God. I
prefer those who are good because they actually are good. I don't
like having to respect my fellow men and women because they are
children of God. I prefer to respect people because they are beings
who feel and suffer. (p. 228)
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