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Herbert Simon Quotes


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Herbert Simon
June 15, 1916 - February 9, 2001
Nationality: American
Category: Scientist
Subcategory: American Scientist

Engineering, medicine, business, architecture and painting are concerned not with the necessary but with the contingent - not with how things are but with how they might be - in short, with design.

   

One finds limits by pushing them.

   

Maybe we ought to have a world in which things are divided between people kind of fairly.

   

No one has characterized market mechanisms better than Friedrich von Hayek.

   

The engineer, and more generally the designer, is concerned with how things ought to be - how they ought to be in order to attain goals, and to function.

   

All correct reasoning is a grand system of tautologies, but only God can make direct use of that fact.

   

The world is vast, beautiful, and fascinating, even awe-inspiring - but impersonal. It demands nothing of me, and allows me to demand nothing of it.

   

The social sciences, I thought, needed the same kind of rigor and the same mathematical underpinnings that had made the "hard" sciences so brilliantly successful.

   

Human knowledge has been changing from the word go and people in certain respects behave more rationally than they did when they didn't have it. They spend less time doing rain dances and more time seeding clouds.

   

Technology may create a condition, but the questions are what do we do about ourselves. We better understand ourselves pretty clearly and we better find ways to like ourselves.

   

Everyone designs who devises courses of action aimed at changing existing situations into preferred ones.

   

There are no morals about technology at all. Technology expands our ways of thinking about things, expands our ways of doing things. If we're bad people we use technology for bad purposes and if we're good people we use it for good purposes.

   

In the computer field, the moment of truth is a running program; all else is prophecy.

   

Anything that gives us new knowledge gives us an opportunity to be more rational.

   

Human beings, viewed as behaving systems, are quite simple. The apparent complexity of our behavior over time is largely a reflection of the complexity of the environment in which we find ourselves.

   

The proper study of mankind is the science of design.

   

What information consumes is rather obvious: it consumes the attention of its recipients. Hence a wealth of information creates a poverty of attention, and a need to allocate that attention efficiently among the overabundance of information sources that might consume it.

   

Most of us really aren't horribly unique. There are 6 billion of us. Put 'em all in one room and very few would stand out as individuals. So maybe we ought to think of worth in terms of our ability to get along as a part of nature, rather than being the lords over nature.

   

One of the first rules of science is if somebody delivers a secret weapon to you, you better use it.

   

I don't care how big and fast computers are, they're not as big and fast as the world.

   

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