Refreshed at 0900GMT ThursdayWriting Worth Reading | July 29, 2010

Aaron David Miller on Middle East peace

Aaron David Miller, on Middle East peace:
One of the most enduring myths surrounding Arab-Israeli diplomacy is that direct negotiations provide the key to successful peacemaking. They don't

Stephen Walt on realism

Stephen Walt, on realism:
Realists understand that military power is a crude instrument and that governing alien societies is a costly business

Michio Kaku on technology

Michio Kaku, on technology:
In the next 10 years, I predict that computer power will be so powerful that you will have the internet in your contact lenses and when you blink you will be online. When you are talking to somebody, you will be able to see their face

Issandr El Amrani on Egypt

Issandr El Amrani, on Egypt:
Its problem is not that it teeters on the brink of an abyss but that it is too complacent, too certain of a rescue. Just as financial institutions assured of a bailout can eschew necessary reforms, so can political systems

From the OUP style manual

From the OUP style manual
If you take hyphens seriously, you will surely go mad

David Edelstein on legitimacy

David Edelstein, on legitimacy:
Whether or not a certain policy is viewed as legitimate very often accords with how it affects a state materially, not whether it conforms to some norm that is valued for ethical or moral reasons

Scott Adams, on conversation

Scott Adams, on conversation
As a general rule, conversations about how people have or will interact are interesting, and conversations about objects are dull

Cabin crew member on airlines

Cabin crew member, on airlines:
They like the economy passengers to see those trays of champagne being taken into club class. It's all part of making them feel dissatisfied in the hope they may upgrade next time.

Adam Kirsch, on sonnets

Adam Kirsch, on sonnets
All poetry can be seen as a conversation between poets over time

David Brooks, on morality

David Brooks, on morality
People who behave morally don’t generally do it because they have greater knowledge; they do it because they have a greater sensitivity to other people’s points of view

Tony Judt, on Iraq

Tony Judt, on Iraq
My objection to all my liberal friends who ran with the Iraq hawks is that they were not making the case for liberal interventionism, but for exemplary war

Research Digest, on idleness

Research Digest, on idleness:
Forced to wait for fifteen minutes at the airport luggage carousel leaves many of us miserable and irritated. Yet if we'd spent the same waiting time walking to the carousel we'd be far happier

Osar Wilde, on journalism

Oscar Wilde, on journalism:
There is much to be said in favour of modern journalism. By giving us the opinions of the uneducated, it keeps us in touch with the ignorance of the community

Parks on language

Tim Parks, on language:
Foreign languages are unsettling. They remind us how arbitrary the mental world we live in is

Matt Ridley, on BP

Matt Ridley, on BP:
If BP really wants to kill birds, it should indeed go beyond petroleum and into wind, an industry that kills far more rare birds per joule of energy produced than oil does

Golub, on Darwin and God

Alex Golub, on Darwin and God:
One side believes it possesses an infallible book written by an omnipotent author with a huge beard with completely explains the dynamics all living things on earth. The other side believes in the literal truth of the bible

Dershowitz on truth

Alan Dershowitz, on truth:
The law is agnostic about truth. It's very skeptical of ultimate truth. That's why freedom of speech permits lies to be told

Milan Kundera, on dogs

Milan Kundera, on dogs
Dogs are our link to paradise. They don't know evil or jealousy or discontent. To sit with a dog on a hillside on a glorious afternoon is to be back in Eden, where doing nothing was not boring—it was peace

Newey on golf

Glen Newey, on Golf:
As the aim is to record as few strokes, rather than rack up as many runs/goals/points, as possible, its parsimony appeals to the Scotsman in every man

Demick on ideograms

Barbara Demick, on ideograms:
The Chinese language can squeeze a lot of information into a small space. One example is a single character, pronounced "zha," which means the red dots that appear on your nose when you are drunk