bugrug logo Who thinks up all this stuff?

Many people. Some of these ideas may be thousands of years old and are probably unattributable. Beyond that, why be concerned? If anything here isn’t reasonable, convince us and we’ll change it. If it is legitimate, crediting a particular individual won’t make it any truer, and could diminish the contributions of others who may be unknown. Think of it as stone soup for the soul.

If I have seen further, it is by standing upon the shoulders of giants.
Sir Isaac Newton

Many ideas grow better when transplanted into another mind than in the one where they sprang up.
Oliver Wendell Holmes

Learn from the mistakes of others - you can’t live long enough to make them all yourself.
Martin Vanbee

The secret to creativity is knowing how to hide your sources.
C. E. M. Joad

bugrug logo How we attribute quotes

Attributing quotes can be particularly troublesome and unreliable. Often, there’s no practical way to trace the ultimate source, or to know what the exact words really were. We select quotes that are interesting, important, or clever on their own. If nothing else, an attribution means that we wish we could take the credit, but someone else thought of it first.

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bugrug logo Stone soup

An old story with many variations

A wanderer came upon a small village, seeking shelter for the night. The villagers were very poor and suggested he keep moving because there was no food to spare. The wanderer wasn’t the least bit concerned and offered to make stone soup for everyone. As the villagers gathered, he built a fire and filled his huge pot with water. Everyone watched in amazement as he took a velvet bag from his pocket, removed a well-polished stone and ceremoniously dropped it into the boiling water. The stranger explained that the soup would be a bit thin as the stone was getting so old, but a few potatoes would give the soup more body. As one villager eagerly produced the potatoes, the wanderer mentioned that the king often eats stone soup with a bit of meat added. Another villager rushed home for some dried beef, anxious to taste this soup fit for a king. As the pot boiled, and the wanderer continued explaining ways to make the soup even better, the pot was soon filled with carrots, onions, cabbage, corn, mushrooms, herbs, and spices. Years later, the villagers still spoke of the wondrous stone that made such delicious soup.
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