Is That a Philosophy or a Business-plan in Your Pocket or RU Happy 2C Me or Both?

Ann Druyan and Carl Sagan (died 20 Dec 1996)

Thematics uber humans : Also Sprach (alarmingly the ‘Books-are-engineered-infrastucture-in-English’ Rand-Freud-Bernays-Samuelson-Watson-Dulles objectivist nutters of the mid 20th century via @Google @Apple @Meta +@Microsoft all micro & no macro no-ideas deracinated self-destructing world don’t provide the Deutscher and @Wikipedia does so only in parentheses (brackets, young people) Pahpa John: that heading up the top of this document is an SS3 (4 sets & 3 L’s, cnjnctrs, #s) – I think, โˆด when I devised that early notation set-up in 1999 I was walking-talking PTSD, conscientising everything and experiencing nothing, all Right-side mental in my case, after special attention from the South Australian police. Five sets is it, anyway. You all knew that – which is my freedom and civil rights back. It’s taken 33 years. That’s how long it’s been since I ran against that creature.

One good fragment of learning will always generate another in your mind, young people. Right here or be accurate and neat in your studies right there in the paragraph preceding Thus Spake was dialectically teamed (SS1) with Also Sprach. That combo amused me when i was 18 or some shit and first considered Nietzsche and what the man was really for in human history other than his unrequited romantic blah or stalking thing-thing.

So now look for the first time I’ve put the two micro Great-man UTTERANCES EXPOSTULATIONS & EJACULATIONS together and turned up a blood-curdling ‘he died in a 727’ (โœˆ gag that) say 1700 Newtonian quadratic equation – โœˆ โฑ๏ธŽ Travel/ travaille (did the earth move 4 you 2?)

– what did happen to Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s ‘Toughen-up princess’ government nimbleness, agility, resilience, capacity-building and following-that-parasuicidal-fat-man-dream-with-Who-TF-1965-ever Social Contract when @GoldmanSachs @PwC and @bankofengland got hold of it, gulp, more Time-travel, this time to exciting futures being told how to both think and act by your phones, young people.

Write wright rite and Right-side of human Race-memory – Plato the cinema-cave guy circa 2400BCE) primarily expressed as 8 : 8 ‘skin’ MARRIAGE LAW – twenty per cent safer against congenital disorders in infants than the Levitical or 6 : 6 parents, grandparents, great grandparents marriage law – known in all traditional aboriginal societies since antiquity as The Law, that moving finger writing, rite-ing, righting and ritual-teaching that NO END of piety, wit, tears, vast cash injections or meetings of the Wikipedia Druids Collective of Sherwood Forest may lure back to cancel half a line or even wash out a word (of it), young people.

BEGIN โ˜ž

Denis Diderot had four sisters, the eldest named Denise.. [whom he] sometimes referred [to] as ‘a female Socrates,’ such was her power of thought1

Correct Name Autism Spectrum Disordet 2013 – mischievous public relations & government advertising slogan terms Neurodivergence & Dysphoria

“.. She wore false noses made from wood and glass, and is reported to have remained astonishingly cheerful throughout, drawing strength from her Christian faith. Denis Diderot’s daughter concluded that her aunt ‘possessed the rare secret of finding heaven on earth.’

“.. Returning there from Paris in middle, he wrote to his lover Sophie Volland of ‘a charming promenade, consisting of a broad aisle of thickly verdured trees leading to a small grove … I pass hours in this spot, reading, meditating, contemplating nature, and thinking of my love.โ€™

“.. Diderot wrote (or contributed to) more than [6,000] entries, tackling almost every subject (although many of these were translations from Chambers and other sources, not least specialist medical textbooks). In the first ‘A’ volume alone he composed articles on giving birth (Accouchement), steel (Acier), agriculture, a boring machine for the manufacture of cannons (Alรฉsoir), the Arabs, silver (Argent), and Aristotle.

“.. From 1747 to 1758 he was partnered by Jean Le Rond D’Alembert, the illegitimate offspring of aristocratic parent [s] (he was abandoned in a wooden box on the steps of the Parisian church St-Jean-le-Rond). Like Diderot, D’Alembert was another of those men whose agile mind found it impossible to settle on a single profession.

“Trained as a barrister and doctor, D’Alembert was also a skilful musician and mathematician; he was clearly suited to the breadth of learning required to edit a tremendous reference [‘work’]. And perhaps he felt he had something to prove: Frank and Serena Kafker have observed that while he had a sharp wit and talent for mimicry, he also had a high-pitched voice, a tiny3 build and rather plain features.’ The relationship of the two editors was productive but fiery. The Kafkers defined their characters as equally ‘touchy, self-righteous, given to emotional outbursts and convinced of his intellectual excellence4.’

“D’Alembert wrote daringly on mathematics, physics, music and astronomy, and his professional connections resulted in the commissioning of many fruitful entries. He was keen to use the Encyclopรจdie to advance contemporary and original thought. Indeed he saw it as a weapon, and his most controversial article almost brought down the whole enterprise5.

“The entry entitled Genรจve contained rather more than just a brief history of that city state, it’s length alone suggested there was mischief to come. The whole of England was afforded three-fifths of a column, Denmark merely seventeen lines, but for Geneva, D’Alembert wrote four double-columned pages. His tone was admonishing. He criticised the city’s legislators for refusing to allow the staging of plays for ‘the fear of the taste for display, dissipation and libertinage that companies of actors communicate to the youth.’ In Geneva, D’Alembert argued, freedom of expression and loose morals were suppressed lest a whole generation grow up to sweep away their opposite. He had learnt of this suppression when visiting Voltaire, and the philosopher and playwright certainly influenced the complaint. For good measure D’Alembert also accused Calvinist ministers of hypocrisy and deception, and criticised what he saw as tuneless singing at church services.

“His opinion of the city wasn’t all bad – he approved, for instance, of certain Genevese penal leniencies (the refusal to put criminals on the rack among them), but he must have known his article would cause offence. The local elders banned the Encyclopรฉdie in the city, and an angry meeting called by the Council of Geneva stopped just short of an official protest to the French government for fear of reprisals.. “

Any or at least several way (s) [v] that’s me done for now, John, Kangaroos (mahlu-muhga) Meat-pies Toyotas Australia โฌ…๏ธŽ branding no-avatars keeping-safe-from the incognisant micro- or right-side supply-side fixated if not obsessed, and MPs & Local Government councillors

1 Denis Diderot was born in Langres, north-easter France, on 5 October 1713..

2 Lan’-sakes Mษ˜ss Betsy

3 90%-certainly subnutrition as infant and toddler common in southern Europe from feudal times through to the end of 20th C

4 the Dunning-Kruger effect is a cognitive bias where people with low ability or knowledge in a specific area overestimate their own competence, while those with high ability often underestimate theirs. This happens because a lack of knowledge prevents individuals from accurately self-assessing their own mistakes and shortcomings. The effect was first described by psychologists David Dunning and Justin Kruger in 1999

5 [faithfully reproduced footnote, p99] ‘Both Diderot and D’Alembert acknowledged a philosophical [ALL GUFFAW GIGGLE HOOT ‘RAMBAHNCT’ REMONSTRATE GAILY clap hands slap your feet play it on dah big bass drum tahrahmm tiddly ahmm tahm dumb dumb dumb what a picture-what a picture-what a photograph-stick-it-in-your-family-stick-it-in-your-family-album] debt to Francis Bacon’s The Advancement of Learning, specifically their taxonomy of knowledge ‘tree’ in the preface was directly inspired by the pull-out ‘Analysis‘ in that volume. D’Alambert credited Bacon as an inspiration who had ‘silently in the shadows, prepared from afar the light which gradually, by imperceptible degrees, would illuminate the world.’ The entry in Encyclopรฉdie by Abbรฉ Jean Pestre entitled ‘Baconisme’ referrred to Bacon as a ‘grande gรฉnie.’

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