Some problems are just too complicated for rational, logical solutions. They admit of insights, not answers.


The New Yorker (Jan. 26, 1963)


Some problems are just too complicated for rational, logical solutions. They admit of insights, not answers.

Some problems are just too complicated for rational, logical solutions. They admit of insights, not answers.

Some problems are just too complicated for rational, logical solutions. They admit of insights, not answers.

Some problems are just too complicated for rational, logical solutions. They admit of insights, not answers.