T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2677.1 | A more complete quote | DECC::AMARTIN | Alan H. Martin | Tue Sep 21 1993 11:19 | 13 |
| EMACS_MODES: fill !lnumb fillcol=70 display_percent time lnowid=5
@(#)Guide data file version 1.363, copyright C.R. Colbert 7/11/90.
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We trained hard...but it seemed that everytime we were beginning to
form up into teams, we would be reorganized. I was to learn later in
life that we tend to meet any new situation by reorganizing: and a
wonderful method it can be for creating the illusion of progress
while producing confusion, inefficiency and demoralization
Petronius Arbiter
Greek navy 210 b.c.
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2677.2 | To arbitrate? | SAHQ::BAINE | | Tue Sep 21 1993 11:33 | 5 |
| So, did maybe the word "arbitrate" come from this man's last name?
Almost sounds like a spoof quote to me.
|
2677.3 | | SYORPD::DEEP | Bob Deep - SYO, DTN 256-5708 | Tue Sep 21 1993 12:08 | 10 |
|
"The only thing that man learns from history, is that man does not learn
from history."
Original author unknown ... passed on to me by a 10th grade Social Studies
teacher.
Very true, IMHO...
Bob
|
2677.4 | | ICS::CROUCH | Subterranean Dharma Bum | Tue Sep 21 1993 12:42 | 5 |
| re: .2
Yes
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2677.5 | Cf. Santayana | ICS::NELSONK | | Tue Sep 21 1993 14:01 | 4 |
| re .3 -- "Those who cannot remember history are doomed to repeat it."
--Georges Santayana
Quoted so often, it's become a cliche.
|
2677.6 | ...repeat or repost it. | REGENT::LASKO | CPBU Desktop Hardcopy Systems | Tue Sep 21 1993 14:09 | 2 |
| The quote from Petronius Arbiter is first cited in topic 892.3 of this
conference. I believe it is one other place, but I had a marker there.
|
2677.7 | Along the same lines... | KELVIN::RDISCHLER | | Tue Sep 21 1993 15:28 | 15 |
| "When the situation was manageable, it was neglected,
and now that it is thoroughly out of hand, we apply
too late the remedies which might then have effected
a cure. There is nothing new in the story. It is as
old as the Sibylline books. It falls into that long
dismal catalogue of the fruitlessness of experience
and the confirmed unteachability of mankind. Want of
foresight, unwillingness to act when action would be
simple and effective, lack of clear thinking, confusion
of counsel until the emergency comes, until self-
preservation strikes its jarring gong - these are the
features which constitute the endless repetition of
history."
Churchill, May 2, 1934
|
2677.8 | Another temporal truism | BULEAN::ROBERTS | Are your lights out? | Wed Sep 22 1993 08:22 | 4 |
|
"The future just ain't what it used to be..."
- Source unknown
|
2677.9 | | MU::PORTER | you can't say that in this notes file | Wed Sep 22 1993 09:35 | 5 |
| re .-1
He also said
"Nostalgia ain't what it used to be."
|
2677.10 | Is this deja vu all over again? | ELWOOD::LANE | Good:Fast:Cheap: pick two | Wed Sep 22 1993 09:41 | 0 |
2677.11 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Wed Sep 22 1993 10:02 | 3 |
| Casey Stengle (SP?)
Marc H.
|
2677.12 | A bucketful of wisdom | OSLACT::HENRIKW | Riding the Nordic Territory | Wed Sep 22 1993 11:02 | 12 |
| In the Viking Ship museum here in Oslo, there's a
1,000 year old wooden bucket with a runic inscription.
An informative card beside it carries a translation and
a comment:
******************************
* "Man knows little" *
* [Uncertain interpretation] *
******************************
Henrik
|
2677.13 | Learn? From history? | EPSIII::RVENKATE | | Wed Sep 22 1993 12:52 | 15 |
|
"The only thing that man learns from history, is that man does not learn
from history."
Original author unknown ... passed on to me by a 10th grade Social Studies
teacher.
Or you could also say "History... will teach us nothing" -- Sting.
Very true, IMHO...
Bob
Kumar
|
2677.14 | Yogi | BOOKS::HAMILTON | All models are false; some are useful - Dr. G. Box | Wed Sep 22 1993 12:59 | 12 |
|
re. -1
.... or as Henry Ford II was widely rumored to have said, "History
is bunk" (I heartily disagree, by the way)
My personal favorite comes from (I think, but check me on this)
Yogi Berra:" Avoid making predictions, especially about the future."
Glenn
|
2677.15 | i hope you like this | STAR::ABBASI | i am a good writer at heart | Wed Sep 22 1993 14:04 | 16 |
|
"history is a reflection of our future brought back by the passage of
time within our soles"
this is really weird, but i always seem inspired during the lunch time
more than any other time of the day and this is when i thought of the
above quote.
if i come up with more quotes on this i'll be happy to share it with
my fellow DECeees.
thank you,
\nasser
|
2677.16 | | CCAD23::TAN | FY94-Prepare for Saucer Separation | Thu Sep 23 1993 04:04 | 8 |
| re .3, .13
"We learn from history that we learn nothing from history."
- George Bernard Shaw
"History would be a wonderful thing - if it were only true."
- Tolstoy
|
2677.17 | | POCUS::HUSTON | | Thu Sep 23 1993 11:53 | 6 |
| "History sucks."
-Butthead
"Yeah, huh, huh, huh"
-Beavis
|
2677.18 | ex | POWDML::MCDONOUGH | | Thu Sep 23 1993 12:36 | 17 |
| Re .0/.1
It's nice to see this again... Last time I saw it was in 1972 in a
"History of Ancient Rome", the author of which escapes me...but the
book and many similar to it are in most public libraries..
To "nit-pick" a bit though: Petronius Arbiter, if he did do this
relative to the Greek Navy, must have done so as a P.O.W.. He was a
Roman Centurion, 6th Cohort under Ceaser in Gaul when he wrote this,
according to history text.
However, it makes little difference to the validity of his
understanding. I think this is a pretty clear verification of another
proverb:
"The more things change, the more they remain the same."
|
2677.19 | The more things change, the more they remain things. | RUMOR::FALEK | ex-TU58 King | Thu Sep 23 1993 18:31 | 1 |
|
|
2677.20 | About reorganization in general... | MLNAD0::ANTONANGELI | We believe in diversity | Fri Sep 24 1993 13:49 | 8 |
| Another good one, very used in Italy:
"Sometimes is necessary that everything changes so that everything
can remain the same"
G. Tomasi di Lampedusa, from the novel "Il Gattopardo" (or
from the movie by Luchino Visconti with the same title)
�AA
|
2677.21 | | TALLIS::PARADIS | There's a feature in my soup! | Tue Sep 28 1993 17:59 | 4 |
| "We're going to keep repeating history until we get a passing grade"
-- from my copious button collection
|
2677.22 | AARGH!! LUCY!!! | ANGLIN::ROGERS | Sometimes you just gotta play hurt | Tue Sep 28 1993 18:50 | 16 |
| How about a moratorium?
I know we could never stop re-organizing, OK...but how about NOT
ALLOWING ANY NEW ACRONYMS OR GROUP NAMES???
In _particular_, you would be forbidden from renaming any existing
group, no matter how ill-named they are.
You could form any new group you wanted, to do whatever needed to be
done, but it had to go by some existing name!
Re-naming is becoming such a plague around here, that you can't fix
accountability on anybody! They're moving targets. Who remembers the
charter of some group from one year ago, who may have made a stupid
decision that's killing us now? No matter, all those people have
reorganized and re-acronymed, and now you can't find them!
|
2677.23 | "I wish I'd said that!" "You will, Oscar, you will." | LYCEUM::CURTIS | Dick "Aristotle" Curtis | Fri Oct 15 1993 22:32 | 44 |
| This quote bothers me to no end.
By far the likeliest person to be meant by the name Petronius Arbiter
was the fellow who wrote the Satyricon. Tacitus mentions that he was
a consul (and yet seems to have gotten his praenomen wrong), and
reports how he committed suicide after being accused (it's believed
falsely and out of malice) of being aligned with an enemy of the
emperor Nero in A.D. 66.
"Gaius Petronius deserves a further brief notice. He spent his
days sleeping and his nights working and enjoying himself.
Industry is the usual foundation of success, but with him it was
idleness. Unlike most people who throw away their money in
dissipation, he was not regarded as an extravagant sensualist,
but as one who made luxury a fine art. His conversation and his
way of life were unconventional with a certain air of nonchalance,
and they charmed people all the more by seeming so unstudied. Yet
as proconsul in Bithynia and later as consul, he showed himself a
vigorous and capable administrator. His subsequent return to his
old habits, whether this was real or apparent, led to his admission
to the small circle of Nero's intimates, as his Arbiter of
Elegance. In the end Nero's jaded appetite regarded nothing as
enjoyable or refined unless Petronius had given his sanction to it.
Consequently the jealousy of Tigellinus was aroused against him..."
(Tacitus, Annals 16.18)
I think it's obvious that this geezer wasn't around both in the late
third century B.C., and also hobnobbing with Nero in the middle of the
first century A.D. And while a Greek could become a Roman citizen in
that period, I don't think any of them were getting elected to the post
of consul, which still had considerable cachet (but not the power of
centuries past, alas).
There's one catch, though -- I've read most of the Satyricon in
English, and don't recall ever seeing anything resembling this quote.
So I suppose that there might be another (terribly obscure) Petronius,
who just might have been involved with some sort of naval group in
Greece (Roman far from home, like joining the French Foreign Legion
today)...
I guess this means I should read it again, in my copious spare time,
and put the issue to bed.
Dick
|
2677.24 | | ATYISB::HILL | Come on lemmings, let's go! | Mon Oct 18 1993 05:14 | 12 |
| It must be remembered that there is nothing more
difficult to plan, more doubtful of success, nor
more dangerous to manage than the creation of a
new system.
For the initiator has the enmity of all who would
profit by the preservation of the old institution
and merely lukewarm defenders in those who would
gain new ones.
Nicollo Machiavelli - "The Prince" 1513
|
2677.25 | Missing title for .24 | ATYISB::HILL | Come on lemmings, let's go! | Mon Oct 18 1993 05:15 | 3 |
| Re -1
Is this what happened to the CBUs?
|
2677.26 | for the ignorant | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 223-8576, MSO2-2/A2, IM&T) | Mon Oct 18 1993 11:39 | 8 |
| re Note 2677.23 by LYCEUM::CURTIS:
> (and yet seems to have gotten his praenomen wrong),
Please tell me what a "praenomen" is, lest I find that I've
gotten mine wrong, too!
Bob
|
2677.27 | | SWAM2::WALDO_IR | | Mon Oct 18 1993 12:09 | 5 |
| re:26
From the Webster Dictionary on my desk:
praenomen - the first of the usual three names of an ancient Roman
|
2677.28 | Omnia quae scire vultis (everything you wanted to know...) | LYCEUM::CURTIS | Dick "Aristotle" Curtis | Sat Nov 27 1993 00:37 | 31 |
| .26, .27:
Up through early Imperial times, the standard was to have 3 names:
� the praenomen (rather like one's Christian name). There seems to
have been a list of about 14 or 15 which were in such common use that
they were usually abbreviated to the first initial (e.g.,
C. Cornelius Tacitus)
� the nomen (clan name)
� the cognomen (family name)
e.g. Caius Iulius Caesar, Marcus Tullius Cicero.
One also occasionally finds the use of the 'agnomen', a nick-name often
referring to some feat (the word is related to the verb 'to identify,
to recognize'), e.g. Publius Cornelius Scipio Africanus (later called
Africanus Maior, to distinguish him from a relative, P. Cornelius
Scipio Aemilianus, who also distinguished himself against Carthage, and
was dubbed Africanus Minor). If memory serves, the latter's
"Aemilianus" refers to his adoption; it might also offer some insights
into Roman naming conventions if I could recall the details.
Finally, if I recall the list of names correctly, Emperors in the later
centuries tended to add "Caesar" to their names as a sort of agnomen or
title. Curiously, this persisted into this very century -- in two
countries whose languages (and leaders) have no direct descent from
the Romans.
Dick
|
2677.29 | These are clearly titles, not names | TLE::JBISHOP | | Mon Nov 29 1993 13:27 | 5 |
| re .28
Kaiser and Tsar/Czar, of course.
-John Bishop
|
2677.30 | Another title... | ASD::DIGRAZIA | | Tue Nov 30 1993 10:05 | 11 |
|
Re .28, .29:
> Kaiser and Tsar/Czar, of course.
I think also Shah.
...none of which are in use any more, I think.
rd
|
2677.31 | description - name - title | SMURF::WALTERS | | Tue Nov 30 1993 10:49 | 3 |
|
"Caesar" means "long hair", so like many names probably started out
as a descriptive term. A pretty hairy job too.
|
2677.32 | Hm, the AHD even mentions it (as etymology of "muscle") | LYCEUM::CURTIS | Dick "Aristotle" Curtis | Tue Nov 30 1993 16:48 | 7 |
| .31:
Yeah, but there were worse -- perhaps the name explains why two heroes
(father & son, or grandfather & grandson) died in battle. They were
both named Publius Decius Mus.
Dick
|