ela disse: não consigo.
ele disse: mas porquê?
ela disse: porque é uma espécie de...
ele disse: sim??
ela disse: um campo de minas. olhá-lo é um campo de minas.
ele disse: hum.
ela disse: percebes?
ele disse: (...)
ela disse: e as nódoas negras?
ele disse: passam.
ela disse: (...)
ele disse: dá-lhe a mão. suada, suja, com medo, não interessa. dá-lhe a mão.
(ela não lhe disse nada por insuficiência do sistema respiratório).
"Mathematicians, in the modern sense of the world, emerged as the proprietors of a science (and of a claim to scientific status) quite clearly detached from philosophy - a science which considered itself both necessary and self-sufficient. Thus mathematicians appropriated space, and time, and made them part of their domain, yet they did so in a rather paradoxical way. They invented spaces - and 'indefinity', so to speak, of spaces: non-Euclidean spaces, curved spaces, x-dimensional spaces (even spaces with an infinity of dimensions), spaces of configuration, abstract spaces, spaces defined by deformation or transformation, by a topolgy, and so on. At once highly general and highly specialized, the language of mathematics set ou to discriminate between and classify all these innumerable spaces as precisely as possible. (...) But the relantionship between mathematics and reality (...) was not obvious, and indeed a deep rift had developed between these two realms".
{text: 'the production of space', henri lefebvre, trad: donald nicholson-smith, blackwell publishing, 1984, p.2. image: fffound}