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“Common sense is what tells us the earth is flat.”
― Stuart Chase
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Stuart Chase
Born in Somersworth, New Hampshire, The United States March 08, 1888 DiedNovember 01, 1985
Stuart Chase was an American economist and engineer trained at MIT. His writings covered topics as diverse as general semantics and physical economy. His hybrid background of engineering and economics places him in the same philosophical camp as R. Buckminster Fuller. Chase's thought was shaped by Henry George, Thorstein Veblen and Fabian socialism.
Chase spent his early political career supporting "a wide range of reform causes: the single tax, women's suffrage, birth control and socialism." Chase's early books The Tragedy of Waste (1925) and Your Money's Worth (1928) were notable for their criticism of corporate advertising and their advocacy of consumer protection. Although not a Marxist, Chase admired the planned economy of the Soviet U ...more Stuart Chase's The Tyranny of Words
published 1938 — The Proper Study of Mankind
published 1978 Guides to Straight Thinking, with 13 Common Fallacies
published 1956 Power of Words
by Stuart Chase, Marian T. Chase
published 1954 Danger: Men Talking! A Background Book on Semantics and Communication
published 1969 Some Things Worth Knowing; A Generalist's Guide To Useful Knowledge
published 1970 — 2 editions Mexico: A Study Of Two Americas
by Stuart Chase, Marian Tyler, Diego Rivera (Illustrator)
published 1931 — 3 editions Rate THE ROAD WE ARE TRAVELING 1914-1942: Guidelines to America's future as reported to the Twentieth Century Fund
published 2015 The Challenge of Waste
by Stuart Chase, Roy Pitchford (Editor)
published 1922 Tragedy of waste
published 1925
Last edited by Common Sense (5/06/2016 7:54 am)
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Sounds like a real shady guy.
I wouldn't listen to a thing he says. 🙂
Last edited by Goose (5/06/2016 8:01 am)
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You post his quote?
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Yea I "post his quote"
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I think the quote is somewhat profound and revealing. The author of the quote isn't important to me. It's the message of the quote that should be discussed and what it says about human nature.
Commonsense tells us the earth is flat because when I walk toward the horizon I don't sense I'm walking on a sphere and if I go too far, I would fall off. Innovative and creative people challenge what we observe and widely accept as truth.
That's what I took from the quote, anyway.
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Just Fred wrote:
I think the quote is somewhat profound and revealing. The author of the quote isn't important to me. It's the message of the quote that should be discussed and what it says about human nature.
Commonsense tells us the earth is flat because when I walk toward the horizon I don't sense I'm walking on a sphere and if I go too far, I would fall off. Innovative and creative people challenge what we observe and widely accept as truth.
That's what I took from the quote, anyway.
I completely agree, Fred.
And just to be clear, we are discussing the widely used term. Not the poster using the moniker.
No need to take offense.
Think different.
Last edited by Goose (5/06/2016 3:31 pm)
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Common sense is the collection of prejudices acquired by age eighteen.
Albert Einstein
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