“We may take it that the world is undoubtedly itself [i.e., is indistinct from itself], but, in any attempt to see itself, as an object, it must, equally, undoubtedly act so as to make itself distinct from and therefore false to itself. In this sense, in respect to its own information, the universe must expand to escape the telescopes through which we, who are it, are trying to capture it, which is us.”
Quote by G. Spencer Brown
Book:Laws of Form
Work
Laws of Form
Browse quotes and source details for this work. more
Author
You May Also Like
Source: Fahrenheit 451
Source: Dragon Bound
Source: Self-Consciousness
Source: Mere Christianity
“He liked to get off by himself, a mile or so from camp, and listen to the country, not the men.”
Source: Lonesome Dove
Source: Bread and Wine