âNo, not of course at allâ âit is really all hocus-pocus. The days lengthen in the wintertime, and when the longest comes, the twenty-first of June, the beginning of summer, they begin to go downhill again, toward winter. You call that âof courseâ; but if one once loses hold of the fact that it is of course, it is quite frightening, you feel like hanging on to something. It seems like a practical jokeâ âthat spring begins at the beginning of winter, and autumn at the beginning of summer. You feel youâre being fooled, led about in a circle, with your eye fixed on something that turns out to be a moving point. A moving point in a circle. For the circle consists of nothing but such transitional points without any extent whatever; the curvature is incommensurable, there is no duration of motion, and eternity turns out to be not âstraight aheadâ but âmerry-go-roundâ!â
âFor goodnessâ sake, stop!â