Life is extraordinarily resilient. It's been around for over a billion years.
I count myself fortunate to be able to participate in the life of science in this era.
I object to a legal approach when settling questions of science or scientific behavior.
It's hard to leave behind scenes and characters I am in love with.
I'm actually, for the most part, a complete agnostic politically.
We know a lot of things, but what we don't know is a lot more.
Abel has left mathematicians enough to keep them busy for 500 years.
And literature frequently rises to heights that make it international.
In 1971 I returned to the University of Chicago as Professor of Physics.
You must show the world that you abhor fighting.
There are many cells you could look at forever in 3D.
I was a kind of hyper-intense person in my twenties and very impatient.
At the end of April I archived 'Curses' and Inform, and announced them on the newsgroups.
Geographic boundaries really begin to disappear with the Internet.
Exciting cities stay exciting, and boring cities stay boring.
Anything that reduces war-related destruction should not be considered altogether immoral.
In 1854 I took out a patent for puddling iron by means of steam.
But the nuclear powers still cling tenaciously to their weapons.
Ultimately, we actually all belong to only one tribe, to Earthlings.
Satisfying every vision that fans have is probably impossible.
We have to wonder, if there is a multiverse, in some other patch of that multiverse are there creatures?