If you blow apart the strata without taking precautions, then instead of drawing the plane you will be killed, plunged into a black hole, or even dragged toward catastrophe.

Staying stratified — organized, signified, subjected — is not the worst that can happen; the worst that can happen is if you throw the strata into demented or suicidal collapse, which brings them back down on us heavier than ever.

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Page 74 DEFINITION By steady or uniform motion, I mean one in which the distances traversed by the moving particle during any equal intervals of time, are themselves equal. Appears in 30 books from 1934-2007

Page 20 A maximally objective science, natural or social, will be one that includes a self-conscious and critical examination of the relationship between the social experience of its creators and the kinds of cognitive structures favored in its inquiry. Appears in 9 books from 1986-2000

Page 6 A free society may be seen to be bent in its entirety on exploring self-improvement — every kind of self-improvement. This suggests a generalization of the principles governing the Republic of Science. It appears that a society bent on discovery must advance by supporting independent initiatives, coordinating themselves mutually to each other. Such adjustment may include rivalries and opposing responses which, in society as a whole, will be far more frequent than they are within science. Even so,... Appears in 6 books from 1962-2002

Page 155 - In the field of interaction of the two sciences, the ambulant sciences confine themselves to inventing problems whose solution is tied to a whole set of collective, nonscientific activities but whose scientific solution depends, on the contrary, on royal science and the way it has transformed the problem by introducing it into its theorematic apparatus and its organization of work. Appears in 9 books from 1989-2005

Page 75 A body is said to be uniformly accelerated when, starting from rest, it acquires equal increments of velocity during equal time intervals. "Sagredo: Although I can offer no rational objection to this or indeed to any other definition, devised by any author whosoever, since all definitions are arbitrary, I may nevertheless without offense be allowed to doubt whether such a definition as the foregoing, established in an abstract manner, corresponds to and describes that kind of accelerated motion which... Appears in 6 books from 1952-2006

Page 172 - Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari, What Is Philosophy? trans. Hugh Tomlinson and Graham Burchell (New York: Columbia University Press, 1994), 74. Appears in 75 books from 1996-2008

Page 154 - We do not lack communication. On the contrary, we have too much of it. We lack creation. We lack resistance to the present Appears in 13 books from 1994-2004

Page 150 - But books of philosophy and works of art also contain their sum of unimaginable sufferings that forewarn of the advent of a people. They have resistance in common— their resistance to death, to servitude, to the intolerable, to shame, and to the present Appears in 11 books from 1994-2008

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