Untitled
The House Of Murphy
Murphy's home
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B
- Babcock's Law:
- If it can be borrowed and it can be broken, you will borrow it and you
will break it.
- Baer's Quartet:
- What's good politics is bad economics; what's bad politics is good
economics; what's good economics is bad politics; what's bad economics
is good politics.
- Bagdikian's Law of Editor's Speeches:
- The splendor of an editor's speech and the splendor of his newspaper
are inversely related to the distance between the city in which he
makes his speech and the city in which he publishes his paper.
- Baker's Byroad:
- When you are over the hill, you pick up speed.
- Baker's Law:
- Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it.
- Baldy's Law:
- Some of it plus the rest of it is all of it.
- Barber's Laws of Backpacking:
- The integral of the gravitational potential taken around any loop trail
you chose to hike always comes out positive.
- Any stone in your boot always migrates against the pressure gradient to
exactly the point of most pressure.
- The weight of your pack increases in direct proportion to the amount of
food you consume from it. If you run out of food, the pack weight goes
on increasing anyway.
- The number of stones in your boot is directly proportional to the
number of hours you have been on the trail.
- The difficulty of finding any given trail marker is directly
proportional to the importance of the consequences of failing to find
it.
- The size of each of the stones in your boot is directly proportional to
the number of hours you have been on the trail.
- The remaining distance to your chosen campsite remains constant as
twilight approaches.
- The net weight of your boots is proportional to the cube of the number
of hours you have been on the trail.
- When you arrive at your chosen campsite, it is full.
- If you take your boots off, you'll never get them back on again.
- The local density of mosquitos is inversely proportional to your
remaining repellent.
- Barrett's Laws of Driving:
- You can get *anywhere* in ten minutes if you go fast enough.
- Speed bumps are of negligible effect when the vehicle exceeds triple
the desired restraining speed.
- The vehicle in front of you is traveling slower than you are.
- This lane ends in 500 feet.
- Barr's Comment on Domestic Tranquility:
- On a beautiful day like this it's hard to believe anyone can be unhappy
-but we'll work on it.
- Barth's Distinction:
- There are two types of people: those who divide people into two types,
and those who don't.
- Bartz's Law of Hokey Horsepuckery:
- The more ridiculous a belief system, the higher the probability of its
success.
- Baruch's Rule for Determining Old Age:
- Old age is always fifteen years older than I am.
- Barzun's Laws of Learning:
- The simple but difficult arts of paying attention, copying accurately,
following an argument, detecting an ambiguity or a false inference,
testing guesses by summoning up contrary instances, organizing one's
time and one's thought for study -all these arts- cannot be taught
in the air but only through the difficulties of a defined subject. They
cannot be taught in one course or one year, but must be acquired
gradually in dozens of connections.
- The analogy to athletics must be pressed until all recognize that in
the exercise of Intellect those who lack the muscles, coordination, and
will power can claim no place at the training table, let alone on the
playing field.
- Forthoffer's Cynical Summary of Barzun's Laws:
- That which has not yet been taught directly can never be taught
directly.
- If at first you don't succeed, you will never succeed.
- Baxter's First Law:
- Government intervention in the free market always leads to a lower
national standard of living.
- Baxter's Second Law:
- The adoption of fractional gold reserves in a currency system always
leads to depreciation, devaluation, demonetization and, ultimately, to
complete destruction of that currency.
- Baxter's Third Law:
- In a free market good money always drives bad money out of circulation.
- Beardsley's Warning to Lawyers:
- Beware of and eschew pompous prolixity.
- Beauregard's Law:
- When you're up to your nose, keep your mouth shut.
- Becker's Law:
- It is much harder to find a job than to keep one.
- Beifeld's Principle:
- The probability of a young man meeting a desirable and receptive young
female increases by pyramidal progression when he is already in the
company of (1) a date, (2) his wife, and (3) a better looking and
richer male friend.
- Belle's Constant:
- The ratio of time involved in work to time available for work is
usually about 0.6.
- Benchley's Distinction:
- There are two types of people: those who divide people into two types,
and those who don't.
- Benchley's Law:
- Anyone can do any amount of work, provided it isn't the work he is
supposed to be doing at that moment.
- Berkeley's Laws:
- The world is more complicated than most of our theories make it out to
be.
- Ignorance is no excuse.
- Never decide to buy something while listening to the salesman.
- Information which is true meets a great many different tests very well.
- Most problems have either many answers or no answer. Only a few
problems have a single answer.
- An answer may be wrong, right, both, or neither. Most answers are
partly right and partly wrong.
- A chain of reasoning is no stronger than its weakest link.
- A statement may be true independently of illogical reasoning.
- Most general statements are false, including this one.
- An exception *tests* a rule; it *never proves* it.
- The moment you have worked out an answer, start checking it -it
probably isn't right.
- If there is an opportunity to make a mistake, sooner or later the
mistake will be made.
- Being sure mistakes will occur is a good frame of mind for catching
them.
- Check the answer you have worked out once more -before you tell it to
anybody.
- Estimating a figure may be enough to catch an error.
- Figures calculated in a rush are very hot; they should be allowed to
cool off a little before being used; thus we will have a reasonable
time to think about the figures and catch mistakes.
- A great many problems do not have accurate answers, but do have
approximate answers, from which sensible decisions can be made.
- Berra's Law:
- You can observe a lot just by watching.
- Berson's Corollary of Inverse Distances:
- The farther away from the entrance that you have to park, the closer
the space vacated by the car that pulls away as you walk up to the
door.
- Bicycle Law:
- All bicycles weigh 50 pounds:
A 30-pound bicycle needs a 20-pound lock and chain.
A 40-pound bicycle needs a 10-pound lock and chain.
A 50-pound bicycle needs no lock or chain.
- First Law of Bicycling:
- No matter which way you ride it's uphill and against the wind.
- The Billings Phenomenon:
- The conclusions of most good operations research studies are obvious.
- Billings's Law:
- Live within your income, even if you have to borrow to do so.
- Blaauw's Law:
- Established technology tends to persist in spite of new technology.
- Blanchard's Newspaper Obituary Law:
- If you want your name spelled wrong, die.
- Bok's Law:
- If you think education is expensive, try ignorance.
- Boling's Postulate:
- If you're feeling good, don't worry. You'll get over it.
- Bolton's Law of Ascending Budgets:
- Under current practices, both expenditures and revenues rise to meet
each other, no matter which one may be in excess.
- Bombeck's Rule of Medicine:
- Never go to a doctor whose office plants have died.
- Bonafede's Revelation:
- The conventional wisdom is that power is an aphrodisiac. In truth, it's
exhausting.
- Boob's Law:
- You always find something the last place you look.
- Booker's Law:
- An ounce of application is worth a ton of abstraction.
- Boozer's Revision:
- A bird in the hand is dead.
- Boren's Laws of the Bureaucracy:
- When in doubt, mumble.
- When in trouble, delegate.
- When in charge, ponder.
- Borkowski's Law:
- You can't guard against the arbitrary.
- Borstelmann's Rule:
- If everything seems to be coming your way, you're probably in the wrong
lane.
- Boston's Irreversible Law of Clutter:
- In any household, junk accumulates to fill the space available for its
storage.
- Boultbee's Criterion:
- If the converse of a statement is absurd, the original statement is an
insult to the intelligence and should never have been said.
- Boyle's Laws:
- The success of any venture will be helped by prayer, even in the wrong
denomination.
- When things are going well, someone will inevitably experiment
detrimentally.
- The deficiency will never show itself during the dry runs.
- Information travels more surely to those with a lesser need to know.
- An original idea can never emerge from committee in the original.
- When the product is destined to fail, the delivery system will perform
perfectly.
- The crucial memorandum will be snared in the out-basket by the paper
clip of the overlying correspondence and go to file.
- Success can be insured only by devising a defense against failure of
the contingency plan.
- Performance is directly affected by the perversity of inanimate
objects.
- If not controlled, work will flow to the competent man until he
submerges.
- The lagging activity in a project will invariably be found in the area
where the highest overtime rates lie waiting.
- Talent in staff work or sales will recurringly be interpreted as
managerial ability.
- The "think positive" leader tends to listen to his subordinates'
premonitions only during the postmortems.
- Clearly stated instructions will consistently produce multiple
interpretations.
- On successive charts of the same organization the number of boxes will
never decrease.
- Branch's First Law of Crisis:
- The spirit of public service will rise, and the bureaucracy will
multiply itself much faster, in time of grave national concern.
- First Law of Bridge:
- It's always the partner's fault.
- Brien's First Law:
- At some time in the life cycle of virtually every organization, its
ability to succeed in spite of itself runs out.
- Broder's Law:
- Anybody that wants the presidency so much that he'll spend two years
organizing and campaigning for it is not to be trusted with the office.
- Brontosaurus Principle:
- Organizations can grow faster than their brains can manage them in
relation to their environment and to their own physiology; when this
occurs, they are an endangered species.
- Brooks's Law:
- Adding manpower to a late software project makes it later.
- Brooke's Law:
- Whenever a system becomes completely defined, some damn fool discovers
something which either abolishes the system or expands it beyond
recognition.
- Brownian Motion Rule of Bureacracies:
- It is impossible to distinguish, from a distance, whether the
bureaucrats associated with your project are simply sitting on their
hands, or frantically trying to cover their asses.
- Heisenberg's Addendum to Brownian Bureaucracy:
- If you observe a bureaucrat closely enough to make the distinction above, he will react to your observation by covering his ass.
- (Jerry) Brown's Law:
- Too often I find that the volume of paper expands to fill the available
briefcases.
- (Sam) Brown's Law:
- Never offend people with style when you can offend them with substance.
- (Tony) Brown's Law of Business Success:
- Our customer's paperwork is profit. Our own paperwork is loss.
- Bruce-Briggs's Law of Traffic:
- At any level of traffic, any delay is intolerable.
- Buchwald's Law:
- As the economy gets better, everything else gets worse.
- Bucy's Law:
- Nothing is ever accomplished by a reasonable man.
- Bunuel's Law:
- Overdoing things is harmful in all cases, even when it comes to
efficiency.
- Bureaucratic Cop-Out #1:
- You should have seen it when *I* got it.
- Burns's Balance:
- If the assumptions are wrong, the conclusions aren't likely to be very
good.
- Bustlin' Billy's Bogus Beliefs:
- The organization of any program reflects the organization of the people
who develop it.
- There is no such thing as a "dirty capitalist", only a capitalist.
- Anything is possible, but nothing is easy.
- Capitalism can exist in one of only two states -- welfare or warfare.
- I'd rather go whoring than warring.
- History proves nothing.
- There is nothing so unbecoming on the beach as a wet kilt.
- A little humility is arrogance.
- A lot of what appears to be progress is just so much technological
rococo.
- Butler's Law of Progress:
- All progress is based on a universal innate desire on the part of every
organism to live beyond its income.
- Bye's First Law of Model Railroading:
- Anytime you wish to demonstrate something, the number of faults is
proportional to the number of viewers.
- Bye's Second Law of Model Railroading:
- The desire for modeling a prototype is inversely proportional to the
decline of the prototype.
Murphy's home
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