Thu Nov 08 05:00:36 PST 2018






ataraxia







ataraxia \at-uh-RAK-see-uh\, noun












A state of freedom from emotional disturbance and anxiety; tranquility.






The former breathes only peace and liberty; he desires only to live and be free from labor; even the ataraxia of the Stoic falls far short of his profound indifference to every other object.






-- Jean-Jacques Rousseau, A Discourse on the Origin of Inequality and a Discourse on Political Economy










Thus, hedonism ends in ataraxia, which confirms the paradoxical relation between sadism and stoicism.






-- Marquis de Sade, 120 Days of Sodom and Other Writings










Ataraxia stems from the Greek word of the same spelling that meant "impassiveness."
















apophasis







apophasis \uh-POF-uh-sis\, noun








Denial of one's intention to speak of a subject that is at the same time named or insinuated, as ?I shall not mention Caesar's avarice, nor his cunning, nor his morality.?














But I think that anything that is deep isn't love, it's deliberate calculation or schizophrenia. I myself wouldn't even attempt to say what love is - probably both love and God can only be defined by apophasis, through those things that they are not.






-- Viktor Pelevin, The Sacred Book of the Werewolf










"?Now, I have no desire to be a backseat driver?? Apophasis, Chris thought; saying you're not going to say something in order to say it. Nixon's favorite device, and Newt Gingrich's, and Karl Rove's?fine old 


Republican tradition.






-- John Barnes, Directive 51














Apophasis stems from the Greek word ap�pha meaning "to say no, deny." The suffix -sis appears in Greek


loanwords, where it forms an abstract noun from a verb, as in thesis.
















versicolor







versicolor \VUR-si-kuhl-er\, adjective








1. Changeable in color: versicolor skies.






2. Of various colors; parti-colored: a versicolor flower arrangement.










The three large versicolor flowers opened up with a silky slap?






-- Boris Vian, Foam of the Daze






The versicolor glow of the Algeron Effect, just a few hundred thousand kilometers from the space station, angled through the viewing port and stippled the far wall.






-- David R. George III, Serpents Among the Ruins










Versicolor comes from the Latin roots vers meaning "to turn" and color. It entered English in the 1620s.











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