No, that diminutive but independent vocable, begins its great role early
in human life and never loses it. For not only can it head a negative
sentence, announcing its judgement, or answer a question, implying its
negated content, it can, and mostly does, in the beginning of speech,
express an assertion of the resistant will-sometimes just that and
nothing more. The adult antiphony to the toddler's incessant no is
another no, that of preventive command, and the great commandments of
later life continue to be prohibitions: Nine of the Ten Commandments are
in the negative. Eva Brann explores nothingness in the third book of her
trilogy, which has treated imagination, time and now naysaying. If we
want to understand something of imagination, memory and time, she
argues, we must mount an inquiry into what it means to say something is
not what it claims to be or is not there or is nonexistent or is
affected by Nonbeing.