James Mishra

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“I think the history of science has shown that valuable consequences often proliferate from simple curiosity,” Shannon once remarked. Curiosity in extremis runs the risk of becoming dilettantism, a tendency to sample everything and finish nothing. But Shannon’s curiosity was different. His kind meant asking a question and then constructing—usually, with his hands—a plausible answer.
A Mind at Play: How Claude Shannon Invented the Information Age
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