May I ask what Mondrian has to do with Kafka? The Kafka-[ab]world
is all too much with us (I've spent much of the past year in a
couple of the less extreme places where it is flourishing today
on earth).
It's a long time since I read Kafka and almost equally long since I last
viewed a
Ed,
I am a private entrepreneur who must examine
everything in order to survive, however you could
help on this if when you say:
Hi Ray,
I won't comment on Marx or Keynes except to say that your library book has
wronged them both.
1. you explained what you meant about the
And I would guess that in xxx years from now people will look back on the
commuters, subway riders and busy busy people and say what? You mean people
went into a Kafka/Mondrian environment and parroted the party line just to
get paid. No wonder there is so little incentive to break the
Ed Weick wrote:
And I would guess that in xxx years from now people will look back on the
commuters, subway riders and busy busy people and say what? You mean people
went into a Kafka/Mondrian environment and parroted the party line just to
get paid. No wonder there is so little incentive
Ray Evans Harrell:
It is inconceivable to one who has ridden the "can" down 800
feet into the cold earth never knowing when a stone would come
loose from the cribbing and meet your head leaving you dead
before work even began, that this work would be glorified.
It is inconceivable that there is
/income
nexus.
arthur
--
From: Ed Weick
To: Ray E. Harrell
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: War, Confucious and the CBD
Date: Thursday, July 22, 1999 1:09PM
Ray Evans Harrell:
It is inconceivable to one who has ridden the "can" down 800
feet into the cold earth never knowing wh
Robert,
My library book on Keynsian economics says basically
the same thing. If your economy is in trouble start a war.
(I can hear the apologist's keyboards rattle, "Marx
wasn't an economist and Keynes didn't mean it.")
One of the things that no one would consider (because
it doesn't fit,