On August 15, 2021 5:35:58 PM GMT+02:00, tito via Dng <dng@lists.dyne.org> wrote:
> In conjunction with a physiological process better known as > learning which transforms your brain in the primary > storage for pointers to the information stored in > your papyrus rolls and allows endless recombination > of the inputted information to achieve what is called progress > through try and error (let's see what happens if principle). > In the end this process will make you a expert in the field of your > choice and your papyrus rolls will be saved in libraries > for the future generations to study (unless they use > only wikipedia and instead of studying they just > print them out wasting loads of paper with no > result at all). Hallo Tito, thank you, you made me laugh aloud, as exactly this "physicological process" was the first thing that came to my mind when reading o1bigtenor's OP: I'd never have been able to word it that short and precisely. The perhaps most important lesson from my school time is, that, after sitting down for two hours to write a cheat sheet the day before a test, I did not need it anymore, as distilling the essence of many hours of (mentally absent) lessons in class to smallest possible handwriting on a 40cm^2 piece of paper, had made this very paper so many times absolutely needless. Regarding gardening, I think there's only one thing to add - the most important quote I took from Douglas Adams HGTTG, namely: > There is a theory which states that if ever anyone > discovers exactly what the Universe is for and why it > is here, it will instantly disappear and be replaced > by something even more bizarre and inexplicable. And just for completeness: > There is another theory which states that this has > already happened. Love, light and libre Grüße! Florian -- [message sent otg] _______________________________________________ Dng mailing list Dng@lists.dyne.org https://mailinglists.dyne.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/dng