![]() JROOT/libraries/src/Application/CMSApplication.php:386 Joomla\CMS\Application\SiteApplication->_construct() JROOT/libraries/src/Application/SiteApplication.php:66 Joomla\CMS\Application\CMSApplication->_construct() JROOT/libraries/src/Application/CMSApplication.php:136 Joomla\CMS\Application\CMSApplication->loadSession() JROOT/libraries/src/Application/CMSApplication.php:826 JROOT/libraries/src/Session/Session.php:456 JROOT/libraries/src/Session/Session.php:499 ![]() JROOT/libraries/src/Session/Session.php:621 JROOT/libraries/src/Session/Session.php:661 JROOT/libraries/joomla/session/handler/joomla.php:88 JROOT/libraries/joomla/session/handler/native.php:50 JROOT/libraries/joomla/session/handler/native.php:260 JROOT/libraries/joomla/session/storage/database.php:45 JROOT/libraries/joomla/database/driver.php:1740 Well, unless you take things down to the quantum level where Heisenberg or the many-worlds interpretation makes an appearance - or perhaps we've just come full circle back to the Mandela Effect? However, a scientific experiment where each individual part is perfectly adjusted to be the same each run, will always produce the same results. For example, an athlete trying to beat his highest high jump score is actually refining his technique and becoming fitter with each attempt, so by the time he does actually make it he is not the same person he was at the first time. The problem is, in real life most don't, otherwise the counter saying "If at first you don't succeed, try and try again" would not serve any purpose. The truth of the quote itself is totally correct at a logical level, which is assuming all possible variables remain the same. There's a detailed history of the quote over at. ![]() ![]() But another remarks, “Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.” Not all the women are willing to admit they needed to be “restored to sanity.” In fact, one of them adamantly maintains that she had never reached a point of insanity. There's an early reference to the quote in a 1981 pamphlet produced by Narcotics Anonymous - and organisation run along similar lines to Alcoholics Anonymous: An editor used the wrong version in Montana's Bozeman Daily Chronicle, and as a resut found it was said by a character in a mystery book titled "Sudden Death". So it comes as quite a surprise for them to hear it wasn't him who originally said it.Įven weirder, it turns out the attribution is all a big mistake. Most people know the quote, and most people attribute it to Einstein when asked. Alternate: He said "Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result"Ĭurrent: He never said "Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result" Wise words but who said them? ![]()
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