“It may sound terrible, but I often say that the military saved me from a conventional life in the United States and I've never really thanked them for it, because I haven't exactly been pro-military in my work.” MayStatesSoundUnitedUnited StatesMilitaryHavensTerribleSavedConventionalConventional Life Author:Robert Jay Lifton
“What the Depression teaches us is that when the economy is so depressed that even a zero interest rate isn't low enough, you have to put conventional notions of prudence and sound policy aside.” EnoughSoundInterestTeachEconomyPolicyLowsNotionRateZeroConventionalPrudenceInterest Rate Author:Paul Krugman
“I'm seeing and hearing lots of B to B instruments, and everybody isn't, you know, using them... a lot of these guys are trying to do it on conventional guitars, although that has its own sound, and maybe its okay.” KnowsTryingGuySoundSeeingOkayInstrumentsGuitarHearingConventional Author:John Sebastian
“A sound banker, alas, is not one who foresees danger and avoids it, but one who, when he is ruined, is ruined in a conventional and orthodox way along with his fellows, so that no one can really blame him. It is necessarily part of the business of a banker to maintain appearances, and to confess a conventional respectability, which is more than human. Life-long practices of this kind make them the most romantic and the least realistic of men.” MenWayHumansKindLongSoundPracticeDangerFellowsBlameInvestingAppearanceHuman LifeOrthodoxRealisticConventionalRuinedAlasLong LifeBankersRespectabilityMost Romantic Author:John Maynard Keynes
“Poetry is a very complex art.... It is an art of pure sound bound in through an art of arbitrary and conventional symbols.” ArtPoetrySoundPoetPureComplexesBoundsSymbolsPoetry IsConventionalArbitrary Author:Ezra Pound
“The mastery of one's phonemes may be compared to the violinist's mastery of fingering. The violin string lends itself to a continuous gradation of tones, but the musician learns the discrete intervals at which to stop the string in order to play the conventional notes. We sound our phonemes like poor violinists, approximating each time to a fancied norm, and we receive our neighbor's renderings indulgently, mentally rectifying the more glaring inaccuracies.” MayPlayOrderLanguageSoundPoorMusicMusicianNotesNeighborToneStringsMasteryConventionalNormViolinIntervalsRenderingViolinistDiscrete Author:Willard Van Orman Quine