A Dictionary of Idiocy: And Other Matters of Opinion

A Dictionary of Idiocy: And Other Matters of Opinion

by Gustave Flaubert (Author), Gustave Flaubert (Author), Stephen Bayley (Author)

Synopsis

This volume provides a light-hearted guide for the perplexed to all things trivial. Wittgenstein said that if people never did silly things, nothing intelligent would ever happen. As human progress depends on the continuing practice of stupidity, Stephen Bayley investigates in this book what is necessary for human progress. Some instances of stupidity are only clearly stupid after the fact such as the astonishing amount of money poured into Internet start-ups, others rely on ideas which are stupid on their own. Starting its journey with the Medieval writer Sebastian Brandt, who wrote "The Ship of Follies of the World" in 1509, even the perplexed will find their way through the maze of progress and common sense. An original miscellany for those who want their trivia served up with panache. The inspiration for this collection comes from Flaubert's "Dictionnaire des Idees Recues", published for the first time in October 1904.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 196
Publisher: Gibson Square Books Ltd
Published: 17 Nov 2003

ISBN 10: 1903933374
ISBN 13: 9781903933374

Author Bio
Starting life as an Art Historian, Stephen Bayley created the first interest in design as a subject of serious study. He has since become an outstpoken opinion maker on art, design and culture. He is a contributing editor of Esquire, a regular critic on television, and a helplessly prolific contributor to all national newspapers and magazines. Resigning from the Dome project as its red tape lengthened, he is fascinated by useless gadgets and once likened using Mercedes's radar-navigation as the nearest to becoming a smart-bomb.