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The Monday Morning Memo

“I think it was the very first painting where it’s title is the background. Think about that. There’s a town there, there’s a Cypress tree, there’s a church steeple. It could have been called The Cypress Tree. It could have been called Sleepy Village. It could have been called Rolling Hills. But no, it’s called Starry Night and everything in front of it is just in the way. How often do you paint something where the title is the background?”
– Neil deGrasse Tyson
in an interview with Joe Rogan, speaking of Van Gogh’s most famous painting

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Random Quote:

“‘But God has chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise; and God has chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty;’ – 1st Corinthians ch. 1

Men started out as a ‘weak thing of the world’ and evolved ‘to confound the things that are mighty.’

And within the human species, too, the weak often develop aptitudes and devices which enable them not only to survive but prevail over the strong.

Indeed, the formidableness of the human species stems from the survival of its weak.

Were it not for the compassion that moves us to care for the sick, the crippled, and the old there probably would have been neither culture nor civilization.

The crippled warrior who had to stay behind while the manhood of the tribe went to war was the first storyteller, teacher, and artisan.

The old and the sick had a hand in the development of the arts of healing and of cooking.

One thinks of the venerable sage, the unhinged medicine man, the epileptic prophet, the blind bard, and the witty hunch back and dwarf.”

- Eric Hoffer, Reflections on the Human Condition

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