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have to expect after death." "Probably Schrödinger does too, but writing as a physicist and deleting the ^question of the natural longings of human beings for a hereafter, he still offers to man the very considerable dignity of the observer of life. We don't have to just sit and get rained on-" "That's not enough!" "Why don't you write to him and find out whether he has some fringe comforts ^to suggest that he couldn't include in his book? He's at one of the Irish universities and he might well be pleased to hear from you. * After all, he is at least as human as we are." I was struck with the force of Mies preoccupation with death and it lent a negative text ^even to the project of the house by the river, and an indefinable dimension to the personality of Mies. I listened to the story of the monument designed by Mies for Paul Leebknecht and Rosa ?? crossed outand constructedcrossed out as a wall made of bricks accidentally fused in the kiln - and saw in it a kind of