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The Story of a Clever Young Man (who dreamed of reducing the world to pure logic)
“Let me tell you a little story. There was once a young man who dreamed of reducing the world to pure logic. Because he was a very clever young man, he actually managed to do it. And when he’d finished his work, he stood back and admired it. It was beautiful. A world purged of imperfection and indeterminacy. Countless acres of gleaming ice stretching to the horizon.     So the clever young man looked around the world he had created, and decided to explore it. He took one step forward and fell flat on his back. You see, he had forgotten about friction. The ice was smooth and level and stainless, but you couldn’t walk there. So the clever young man sat down and wept bitter tears. But as he grew into a wise old man, he came to understand that roughness and ambiguity aren’t imperfections. They’re what make the world turn. He wanted to run and dance. And the words and things scattered upon this ground were all battered and tarnished and ambiguous, and the wise old man saw that that was the way things were. But something in him was still homesick for the ice, where everything was radiant and absolute and relentless. Though he had come to like the idea of the rough ground, he couldn’t bring himself to live there. So now he was marooned between earth and ice, at home in neither. And this was the cause of all his grief.”

–-the story told by J. M. Keynes (John Quentin) to Ludwig Wittgenstein in his death bed in a Derek Jarman's movie Wittgenstein

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Characterizing Wittgenstein (for Hamlet)

Quotes mined from Wikipedia:

Wittgenstein on himself:

"I ought to have... become a star in the sky. Instead of which I have remained stuck on earth."

Wittgenstein, 1949:

"I won't say 'See you tomorrow' because that would be like predicting the future, and I'm pretty sure I can't do that."

Wittgenstein, Tractatus 6.431:

"Death is not an event in life: we do not live to experience death. If we take eternity to mean not infinite temporal duration but timelessness, then eternal life belongs to those who live in the present. Our life has no end in the way in which our visual field has no limits."

Friend and colleague Georg Henrik von Wright:

"He was of the opinion... that his ideas were generally misunderstood and distorted even by those who professed to be his disciples. He doubted he would be better understood in the future. He once said he felt as though he were writing for people who would think in a different way, breathe a different air of life, from that of present-day men."
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