66fc01e
|
If you only read the books that everyone else is reading, you can only think what everyone else is thinking.
|
|
thought
|
Haruki Murakami |
ef9d805
|
But if thought corrupts language, language can also corrupt thought.
|
|
power-of-words
propaganda
thought
|
George Orwell |
d87db97
|
As long as she thinks of a man, nobody objects to a woman thinking.
|
|
stereotypes
men
feminism
self-determination
women
empowerment
intelligence
dignity
social-norms
misogyny
hypocrisy
double-standards
gender
thought
|
Virginia Woolf |
077118a
|
Is it possible, in the final analysis, for one human being to achieve perfect understanding of another? We can invest enormous time and energy in serious efforts to know another person, but in the end, how close can we come to that person's essence? We convince ourselves that we know the other person well, but do we really know anything important about anyone?
|
|
people
friendship
love
philosophy
possibility
important
thought
|
Haruki Murakami |
8fa06b9
|
I like the scientific spirit--the holding off, the being sure but not too sure, the willingness to surrender ideas when the evidence is against them: this is ultimately fine--it always keeps the way beyond open--always gives life, thought, affection, the whole man, a chance to try over again after a mistake--after a wrong guess.
|
|
doubt
science
life
scientific
guess
certainty
skepticism
humble
evidence
mistake
ideas
surrender
thought
|
Walt Whitman |
a976fc4
|
How frail the human heart must be--a mirrored pool of thought.
|
|
human-heart
thought
|
Sylvia Plath |
35efd73
|
Accidental sex. He made it sound like I fell down, and there just happened to be an erection in the way.
|
|
sexual
thought
|
Laurell K. Hamilton |
62b4f04
|
Imagine the people who believe such things and who are not ashamed to ignore, totally, all the patient findings of thinking minds through all the centuries since the Bible was written. And it is these ignorant people, the most uneducated, the most unimaginative, the most unthinking among us, who would make themselves the guides and leaders of us all; who would force their feeble and childish beliefs on us; who would invade our schools and libraries and homes. I personally resent it bitterly.
|
|
library
writing
bible
science
bitter
childish-beliefs
guides
invade
uneducated
unimaginative
unthinking
guide
childish
leader
leaders
imagine
ignore
home
resentment
ignorance
shame
thought
the-bible
school
|
Isaac Asimov |
122c537
|
We speak not only to tell other people what we think, but to tell ourselves what we think. Speech is a part of thought.
|
|
cognition
senses
sociality
community
communication
speech
thought
|
Oliver Sacks |
69acdf0
|
is the statement of an intellectual who underrates toothaches. is a truth much more universally valid, and it applies to everything that's alive. My self does not differ substantially from yours in terms of its thought. Many people, few ideas: we all think more or less the same, and we exchange, borrow, steal thoughts from one another. However, when someone steps on my foot, only I feel the pain. The basis of the self is not thought but suffering, which is the most fundamental of all feelings. While it suffers, not even a cat can doubt its unique and uninterchangeable self. In intense suffering the world disappears and each of us is alone with his self. Suffering is the university of egocentrism.
|
|
suffering
truth
feeling
thinking
thought
|
Milan Kundera |
3cb419f
|
Action springs not from thought, but from a readiness for responsibility.
|
|
action
responsibility
inspirational
thought
|
Dietrich Bonhoeffer |
6fcfc3d
|
Writing is thinking. To write well is to think clearly. That's why it's so hard.
|
|
writing
precision
creative-process
thinking
thought
|
David McCullough |
a3b4651
|
Not in his speech, not in his thoughts, I see his greatness, only in his actions, in his life.
|
|
life
speech
thought
|
Hermann Hesse |
92f5b09
|
Thought is free.
|
|
freedom-of-thought
thought
|
William Shakespeare |
793b39b
|
Religion can never reform mankind because religion is slavery. It is far better to be free, to leave the forts and barricades of fear, to stand erect and face the future with a smile. It is far better to give yourself sometimes to negligence, to drift with wave and tide, with the blind force of the world, to think and dream, to forget the chains and limitations of the breathing life, to forget purpose and object, to lounge in the picture gallery of the brain, to feel once more the clasps and kisses of the past, to bring life's morning back, to see again the forms and faces of the dead, to paint fair pictures for the coming years, to forget all Gods, their promises and threats, to feel within your veins life's joyous stream and hear the martial music, the rhythmic beating of your fearless heart. And then to rouse yourself to do all useful things, to reach with thought and deed the ideal in your brain, to give your fancies wing, that they, like chemist bees, may find art's nectar in the weeds of common things, to look with trained and steady eyes for facts, to find the subtle threads that join the distant with the now, to increase knowledge, to take burdens from the weak, to develop the brain, to defend the right, to make a palace for the soul. This is real religion. This is real worship
|
|
free
slavery
weak
worship
dream
joy
future
fear
heart
inspirational
development
feeling
reform
facts
purpose
gods
burden
threat
knowledge
thought
|
Robert Green Ingersoll |
039008b
|
What I learned on my own I still remember
|
|
reading
discovery
learning
education
intelligence
schooling
thinking
thought
|
Nassim Nicholas Taleb |
2aef816
|
People say sometimes that Beauty is superficial. That may be so. But at least it is not so superficial as Thought is. To me, Beauty is the wonder of wonders. It is only shallow people who do not judge by appearances. The true mystery of the world is the visible, not the invisible.
|
|
shallowness
visible
superficial
invisible
thought
|
Oscar Wilde |
9d70c57
|
Under the thinning fog the surf curled and creamed, almost without sound, like a thought trying to form inself on the edge of consciousness.
|
|
surf
ocean
thought
|
Raymond Chandler |
69bcbd1
|
Sure it will hurt. But so what? Pain is just a state of mind. You can think your way out of anything, even pain.
|
|
thought
|
Rodman Philbrick |
c7c0e58
|
For we all of us, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors, and act fatally on the strength of them.
|
|
thought
|
George Eliot |
cdd9abd
|
Everything is true,' he said. 'Everything anybody has ever thought.' 'Will you be all right?' 'I'll be all right,' he said, and thought, And I'm going to die. Both those are true, too.
|
|
life
truth
thought
|
Philip K. Dick |
bd811f1
|
Man has no automatic code of survival. His particular distinction from all other living species is the necessity to act in the face of alternatives by means of volitional choice. He has no automatic knowledge of what is good for him or evil, what values his life depends on, what course of action it requires. Are you prattling about an instinct of self-preservation? An instinct of self-preservation is precisely what man does not possess. An 'instinct' in as unerring and automatic form of knowledge. A desire is not an instinct. A desire to live does not give you the knowledge required for living. And even man's desire to live is not automatic: your secret evil today is that that is the desire you do not hold. Your fear of death is not a love of life and will not give you the knowledge needed to keep it. Man must obtain his knowledge and choose his actions by a process of thinking, which nature will not force him to perform. Man has the power to act as his own destroyer--and that is the way he has acted through most of history.
|
|
man
life
human-nature
instincts
thought
|
Ayn Rand |
607f1e4
|
Siddhartha has one single goal-to become empty, to become empty of thirst, desire, dreams, pleasure and sorrow-to let the Self die. No longer to be Self, to experience the peace of an emptied heart, to experience pure thought-that was his goal.
|
|
life
siddhartha
self
thought
|
Hermann Hesse |
846c05b
|
Thinking is learning all over again how to see, directing one's consciousness, making of every image a privileged place.
|
|
the-myth-of-sisyphus
thinking
thought
|
Albert Camus |
a429e44
|
I give no sources, because it is indifferent to me whether what I have thought has already been thought before me by another.
|
|
source
thought
|
Ludwig Wittgenstein |
12d1771
|
Thinking can only serve to measure out the helplessness of thought.
|
|
ego
helplessness
perception
thinking
thought
|
H. Rider Haggard |
b13b73b
|
The zipper displaces the button and a man lacks just that much time to think while dressing at dawn, a philosophical hour, and thus a melancholy hour.
|
|
progress
philosophical
philosophy
dressing
innovation
melancholy
thinking
thought
introspection
|
Ray Bradbury |
c4b1d85
|
I am, when you stop to think of it, a member of a fairly select group: the final handful of American novelists who learned to read and write before they learned to eat a daily helping of video bullshit.
|
|
television
reading
writing
pride
thought
|
Stephen King |
bc9b18e
|
"Isn't language loss a good thing, because fewer languages mean easier communication among the world's people? Perhaps, but it's a bad thing in other respects. Languages differ in structure and vocabulary, in how they express causation and feelings and personal responsibility, hence in how they shape our thoughts. There's no single purpose "best" language; instead, different languages are better suited for different purposes. For instance, it may not have been an accident that Plato and Aristotle wrote in Greek, while Kant wrote in German. The grammatical particles of those two languages, plus their ease in forming compound words, may have helped make them the preeminent languages of western philosophy. Another example, familiar to all of us who studied Latin, is that highly inflected languages (ones in which word endings suffice to indicate sentence structure) can use variations of word order to convey nuances impossible with English. Our English word order is severely constrained by having to serve as the main clue to sentence structure. If English becomes a world language, that won't be because English was necessarily the best language for diplomacy."
|
|
language
thought
|
Jared Diamond |
9253092
|
"If we're lucky, writer and reader alike, we'll finish the last line or two of a short story and then just sit for a minute, quietly. Ideally, we'll ponder what we've just written or read; maybe our hearts or intellects will have been moved off the peg just a little from where they were before. Our body temperature will have gone up, or down, by a degree. Then, breathing evenly and steadily once more, we'll collect ourselves, writers and readers alike, get up, "created of warm blood and nerves" as a Chekhov character puts it, and go on to the next thing: Life. Always life."
|
|
writing
thought
short-stories
|
Raymond Carver |
28a84a5
|
While you can't control your experiences, you can control your explanations.
|
|
optimism
speculations
thinking
thought
|
Martin E.P. Seligman |
8f1b560
|
I was struck by an awful thought, the kind that cannot be taken back once it escapes into the open air of consciousness; it seemed to me that this was not a place you go to live. It was a place you go to die.
|
|
live
escape
die
thought
|
John Green |
c98c0d7
|
As a convinced atheist, I ought to agree with Voltaire that Judaism is not just one more religion, but in its way the root of religious evil. Without the stern, joyless rabbis and their 613 dour prohibitions, we might have avoided the whole nightmare of the Old Testament, and the brutal, crude wrenching of that into prophecy-derived Christianity, and the later plagiarism and mutation of Judaism and Christianity into the various rival forms of Islam. Much of the time, I do concur with Voltaire, but not without acknowledging that Judaism is dialectical. There is, after all, a specifically Jewish version of the eighteenth-century Enlightenment, with a specifically Jewish name--the --for itself. The term derives from the word for 'mind' or 'intellect,' and it is naturally associated with ethics rather than rituals, life rather than prohibitions, and assimilation over 'exile' or 'return.' It's everlastingly linked to the name of the great German teacher Moses Mendelssohn, one of those conspicuous Jewish hunchbacks who so upset and embarrassed Isaiah Berlin. (The other way to upset or embarrass Berlin, I found, was to mention that he himself was a cousin of Menachem Schneerson, the 'messianic' Lubavitcher .) However, even pre-enlightenment Judaism forces its adherents to study and think, it reluctantly teaches them what others think, and it may even teach them to think also.
|
|
enlightenment
christianity
religion
education
life
assimilation
chabad-messianism
dialectics
haskalah
isaiah-berlin
menachem-mendel-schneerson
messianism
moses-mendelssohn
prohibitions
rebbes
rituals
rabbis
exile
monotheism
judaism
old-testament
germans
free-thought
return
study
ethics
plagiarism
prophecy
atheism
voltaire
islam
intellect
antisemitism
thought
evil
|
Christopher Hitchens |
c12d7f6
|
We are only lightly covered with buttoned cloth; and beneath these pavements are shells, bones and silence.
|
|
silence
death
life
thought
|
Virginia Woolf |
24ab8a6
|
For God's sake, let us be men not monkeys minding machines or sitting with our tails curled while the machine amuses us, the radio or film or gramophone. Monkeys with a bland grin on our faces.
|
|
humanity
reflection
machines
thought
monkeys
|
D.H. Lawrence |
5c6597b
|
All true histories contain instruction; though, in some, the treasure may be hard to find, and when found, so trivial in quantity, that the dry, shriveled kernel scarcely compensates for the trouble of cracking the nut.
|
|
writing
truth
thought
|
Anne Brontë |
c86d402
|
We read the pagan sacred books with profit and delight. With myth and fable we are ever charmed, and find a pleasure in the endless repetition of the beautiful, poetic, and absurd. We find, in all these records of the past, philosophies and dreams, and efforts stained with tears, of great and tender souls who tried to pierce the mystery of life and death, to answer the eternal questions of the Whence and Whither, and vainly sought to make, with bits of shattered glass, a mirror that would, in very truth, reflect the face and form of Nature's perfect self. These myths were born of hopes, and fears, and tears, and smiles, and they were touched and colored by all there is of joy and grief between the rosy dawn of birth, and death's sad night. They clothed even the stars with passion, and gave to gods the faults and frailties of the sons of men. In them, the winds and waves were music, and all the lakes, and streams, and springs,--the mountains, woods and perfumed dells were haunted by a thousand fairy forms. They thrilled the veins of Spring with tremulous desire; made tawny Summer's billowed breast the throne and home of love; filled Autumns arms with sun-kissed grapes, and gathered sheaves; and pictured Winter as a weak old king who felt, like Lear upon his withered face, Cordelia's tears. These myths, though false, are beautiful, and have for many ages and in countless ways, enriched the heart and kindled thought. But if the world were taught that all these things are true and all inspired of God, and that eternal punishment will be the lot of him who dares deny or doubt, the sweetest myth of all the Fable World would lose its beauty, and become a scorned and hateful thing to every brave and thoughtful man.
|
|
winter
perfection
shakespeare
true
grief
doubt
passion
nature
joy
fear
past
death
dreams
music
hope
life
love
truth
hateful
philosophies
religion-myths
scorn
sacred-books
brave
tender
fairy
haunted
pagan
king-lear
spring
woods
fable
poetic
mountains
lake
birth
smiles
deny
eternity
autumn
punishment
gods
effort
tears
questions
mystery
beautiful
throne
summer
thought
delight
william-shakespeare
pleasure
|
Robert G. Ingersoll |
a43d42b
|
Most of the brain's work is done while the brain's owner is ostensibly thinking about something else, so sometimes you have to deliberately find something else to think and talk about.
|
|
recreation
synthesis
thought
|
Neal Stephenson |
15e51da
|
A thinking mind is not swallowed up by what it comes to know. It reaches out to grasp something related to itself and to its present knowledge (and so knowable in some degree) but also separate from itself and from its present knowledge (not identical with these). In any act of thinking, the mind must reach across this space between known and unknown, linking one to the other but also keeping visible to difference. It is an erotic space.
|
|
eros-the-bittersweet
thinking
knowledge
thought
|
Anne Carson |
9b6dd2a
|
A certain amount of reverie is good, like a narcotic in discreet doses. It soothes the fever, occasionally high, of the brain at work, and produces in the mind a soft, fresh vapor that corrects the all too angular contours of pure thought, fills up the gaps and intervals here and there, binds them together, and dulls the sharp corners of ideas. But too much reverie submerges and drowns. Thought is the labor of the intellect, reverie it's pleasure. To replace thought with reverie is to confound poison with nourishment.
|
|
reverie
intellect
thought
|
Victor Hugo |
2534e95
|
...he is unlike the other customers. They sense it too, and look at him with hard eyes, eyes like little metal studs pinned into the white faces of young men [...] In the hush his entrance creates, the excessive courtesy the weary woman behind the counter shows him amplifies his strangeness. He orders coffee quietly and studies the rim of the cup to steady the sliding in his stomach. He had thought, he had read, that from shore to shore all America was the same. He wonders, Is it just these people I'm outside or is it all America?
|
|
loneliness
inspirational
angstrom
updike
rabbit
outside
strangeness
isolation
thought
|
Updike John |
db7cdb3
|
We are losing the ability to understand anything that's even vaguely complex.
|
|
understanding
wisdom
thought
|
Chuck Klosterman |
55338f6
|
The words are meaningless except in terms of feeling. Does anyone act as the result of thought or does feeling stimulate action and sometimes thought implement it.
|
|
feeling
thought
|
John Steinbeck |
91a84ac
|
"I don't know what this great thing I'm meant to be doing is, and it looks to me as if I was supposed not to know. And I resent that, right? "The old me knew. The old me cared. Fine, so far so good. Except that the old me cared so much that he actually got inside his own brain--my own brain--and locked off the bits that knew and cared, because if I knew and cared I wouldn't be able to do it. [...] "But this former self of mine killed himself off, didn't he, by changing my brain? Okay, that was his choice. This new me has its own choices to make, and by a strange coincidence those choices involve not knowing and not caring about this big number, whatever it is. That's what he wanted, that's what he got. "Except this old self of mine tired to leave himself in control, leaving orders for me in the bit of my brain he locked off. Well, I don't want to know, and I don't want to hear them. That's my choice. I'm not going to be anybody's puppet, particularly not my own. [...] "The old me is dead! [...] Killed himself! The dead shouldn't hang about trying t0 interfere with the living."
|
|
thought
|
Douglas Adams |
fe57ab8
|
People who take a long view of their lives and careers always seem to make much better decisions about their time and activities than people who give very little thought to the future.
|
|
people
future
success
life
hard-decisions
thought
|
Brian Tracy |
ba4bc77
|
Common sense is a chaotic aggregate of disparate conceptions, and one can find there anything that one like.
|
|
thought
|
Antonio Gramsci |
6e53f94
|
Why didn't you dare it before? he asked harshly. When I hadn't a job? When I was starving? When I was just as I am now, as a man, as an artist, the same Martin Eden? That's the question. I've been asking myself for many a day. My brain is the same old brain. And what is puzzling me is why they want me now. Surely they don't want me for myself, for myself the same olf self they did not want. They must want me for something else, for something that is outside of me, for something that is not I. Shall I tell you what that something is? It is for the recognition I have recieved. That recognition is not I. Then again for the money I have earned and am earnin. But money is not I. And is it for the recognition and money, that you now want me?
|
|
love
martin-eden
thought
|
Jack London |
305acab
|
Talk lives in a man's head, but sometimes it is very lonely because in the heads of many men there is nothing to keep it company - and so talk goes out through the lips.
|
|
discourse
thought
|
Beryl Markham |
99f111e
|
It is not humanly possible to gather immediately from it what the logic of language is. Language disguises thought.
|
|
thought
|
Ludwig Wittgenstein |
6bf79cb
|
As far as I am concerned, philosophic questioning is just as likely to make you confused and depressed as it is to improve your condition.
|
|
philosophy
thought
|
Christopher Paolini |
78f9986
|
When you cultivate a godly thought life your soul will shine and you will exhibit the presence of the Lord in you.
|
|
god
life
exhibit
shine
godly
presence
cultivate
lord
christian
thought
soul
|
Elizabeth George |
f13e3ec
|
They sell courage of a sort in the taverns. And another sort, though not for sale, a man can find in the confessional. Try the alehouses and the churches, Hugh. In either a man can be quiet and think.
|
|
solitude
drinking
courage
taverns
withdrawal
beer
confession
reflection
quietness
thought
|
Ellis Peters |
6c6d7ad
|
My own eyes try to sleep, but they don't. They stay wide awake as time snarls forward and silence drops down, like measured thought.
|
|
sleep
time
silence
thought
|
Markus Zusak |
160c564
|
Giving importance to what we think because we thought it, taking our own selves not only (to quote the Greek philosopher) as the measure of all things but as their norm or standard, we create in ourselves, if not an interpretation, at least a criticism of the universe, which we don't even know and therefore cannot criticize. The giddiest, most weak-minded of us then promote that criticism to an interpretation that's superimposed, like a hallucination; induced rather than deduced. It's a hallucination in the strict sense, being an illusion based on something only dimly seen.
|
|
criticism
philosophy
opinions
thought
|
Fernando Pessoa |
199e211
|
The only way to make a library safe is to lock people out of it. As long as they are allowed to read the books 'any old time they have a mind to,' libraries will remain the nurseries of heresy and independence of thought. They will, in fact, preserve that freedom which is a far more important part of our lives than any ideology or orthodoxy, the freedom that dissolves orthodoxies and inspires solutions to the ever-changing challenges of the future. I hope that your library and mine will continue in this way to be dangerous for many years to come.
|
|
libraries
freedom
ideas
thought
|
Edmund S. Morgan |
32dfdb4
|
The cause of my profound sense of incompatibility with others is, I believe, that most people think with their feelings, whereas I feel with my thoughts. For the ordinary man, to feel is to live, and to think is to know how to live. For me, to think is to live, and to feel is merely food for thought.
|
|
thought
|
Fernando Pessoa |
e366cf3
|
take a strict view of their excrements, and, from the colour, the odour, the taste, the consistence, the crudeness or maturity of digestion, form a judgment of their thoughts and designs; because men are never so serious, thoughtful, and intent, as when they are at stool...
|
|
thought
|
Jonathan Swift |
43aca6b
|
Besides, I seemed to hold two lives--the life of thought, and that of reality; and, provided the former was nourished with a sufficiency of the strange necromantic joys of fancy, the privileges of the latter might remain limited to daily bread, hourly work, and a roof of shelter.
|
|
thought
|
Charlotte Brontë |
191c3bc
|
Human thought, flying on the trapezes of the star-filled universe, with mathematics stretched beneath, was like an acrobat working with a net but suddenly noticing that in reality there is no net.
|
|
philosophy
thought
|
Vladimir Nabokov |
dd27801
|
Life had stepped into the place of theory and something quite different would work itself out in his mind.
|
|
mind
theory
god
life
universal
thought
soul
|
Fyodor Dostoyevsky |
b7c6684
|
Sometimes it happens that the most insane thought, the most impossible conception, will become so fixed in one's head that at length one believes the thought or the conception to be reality. Moreover, if with the thought or the conception there is combined a strong, a passionate, desire, one will come to look upon the said thought or conception as something fated, inevitable, and foreordained--something bound to happen. Whether by this there is connoted something in the nature of a combination of presentiments, or a great effort of will, or a self-annulment of one's true expectations, and so on, I do not know;
|
|
reality
impossible
desire
expectations
thought
insane
|
Fyodor Dostoyevsky |
2bcfb40
|
Work on what is real rather than worry about what is unreal.
|
|
mind
women
inspire
god
love
unreal
worry
christian
fake
thought
|
Elizabeth George |
6c98529
|
Prayer is only another name for good, clean, direct thinking. When you pray, think well what you are saying, and make your thoughts into things that are solid. In that manner, your prayer will have strength, and that strength shall become part of you, mind, body, and spirit.
|
|
prayer
strength
thought
|
Richard Llewellyn |
6d119bb
|
That's the worst thing they do to you, to any of you. Whatever those brain lesions are all about, the worst damage is done before they even pick up the knife: You're all brainwashed into believing you're ugly.
|
|
beauty
brainwash
think-on
thought-provoking
pretty
thought
ugly
|
Scott Westerfeld |
5de0b9f
|
Uncouth, clannish, lumbering about the confines of Space and Time with a puzzled expression on his face and a handful of things scavenged on the way from gutters, interglacial littorals, sacked settlements and broken relationships, the Earth-human has no use for thinking except in the service of acquisition. He stands at every gate with one hand held out and the other behind his back, inventing reasons why he should be let in. From the first bunch of bananas, his every sluggish fit or dull fleabite of mental activity has prompted ; and his time has been spent for thousands of years in the construction and sophistication of systems of ideas that will enable him to excuse, rationalize, and moralize the grasping hand. His dreams, those priceless comic visions he has of himself as a being with concerns beyond the material, are no more than furtive cannibals stumbling round in an uncomfortable murk of emotion, trying to eat each other. Politics, religion, ideology -- desperate, edgy attempts to shift the onus of responsibility for his own actions: abdications. His hands have the largest neural representation in the somesthetic cortex, his head the smallest; but he's always trying to hide the one behind the other.
|
|
greed
human-nature
thought
|
M. John Harrison |
b79ee3f
|
I want to talk about another kind of high country now in the world of thought, which in some ways, for me at least, seems to parallel or produce feelings similar to this, and call it the high country of the mind. If all of human knowledge, everything that's known, is believed to be an enormous hierarchic structure, then the high country of the mind is found at the uppermost reaches of this structure in the most general, the most abstract considerations of all. Few people travel here. There's no real profit to be made from wandering through it, yet like this high country of the material world all around us, it has its own austere beauty that to some people makes the hardships of traveling through it seem worthwhile. In the high country of the mind one has to become adjusted to the thinner air of uncertainty, and to the enormous magnitude of questions asked, and to the answers proposed to these questions. The sweep goes on and on and on so obviously much further than the mind can grasp one hesitates even to go near for fear of getting lost in them and never finding one's way out.
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|
enlightenment
philosophy
high-country
montana
mountains
wild
meditation
reflection
consciousness
awareness
thought
introspection
|
Robert M. Pirsig |
4a61431
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Language and hearing are seated in the cerebral cortex, the folded gray matter that covers the first couple of millimeters of the outer brain like wrapping paper. When one experiences silence, absent even reading, the cerebral cortex typically rests. Meanwhile, deeper and more ancient brain structures seem to be activated--the subcortical zones. People who live busy, noisy lives are rarely granted access to these areas. Silence, it appears, is not the opposite of sound. It is another world altogether, literally offering a deeper level of thought, a journey to the bedrock of the self.
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|
experiences
silence
reading
world
activated
bedrock
busy
cerebral-cortex
deeper
gray-matter
structures
subcortical
hearing
sound
brain
noisy
language
ancient
self
thought
journey
|
Michael Finkel |
d2e8459
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"As always when he worked with this much concentration he began to feel a sense of introverting pressure. There was no way out once he was in, no genuine rest, no one to talk to who was capable of understanding the complexity (simplicity) of the problem or the approaches to a tentative solution. There came a time in every prolonged effort when he had a moment of near panic, or "terror in a lonely place," the original semantic content of the word. The lonely place was his own mind. As a mathematician he was free from subjection to reality, free to impose his ideas and designs on his own test environment. The only valid standard for his work, its critical point (zero or infinity), was the beauty it possessed, the deft strength of his mathematical reasoning. THe work's ultimate value was simply what it revealed about the nature of his intellect. What was at stake, in effect, was his own principle of intelligence or individual consciousness; his identity, in short. This was the infalling trap, the source of art's private involvement with obsession and despair, neither more nor less than the artist's self-containment, a mental state that led to storms of overwork and extended stretches of depression, that brought on indifference to life and at times the need to regurgitate it, to seek the level of expelled matter. Of course, the sense at the end of a serious effort, if the end is reached successfully, is one of lyrical exhilaration. There is air to breathe and a place to stand. The work gradually reveals its attachment to the charged particles of other minds, men now historical, the rediscovered dead; to the main structure of mathematical thought; perhaps even to reality itself, the so-called sum of things. It is possible to stand in time's pinewood dust and admire one's own veronicas and pavanes."
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loneliness
mind
depression
despair
obsession
art-creation
concentration
thought
mental-health
|
Don DeLillo |
f25e95c
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If we deny the need for thought, Moneo, as some do, we lose the powers of reflection; we cannot define what our senses report. If we deny the flesh, we unwheel the vehicle which bears us. But if we deny emotion, we lose all touch with our internal universe. It was emotions which I missed the most.
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|
mind
emotion
feeling
thought
|
Frank Herbert |
ee246c7
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"An editor doesn't just read, he reads , and reading well is a creative, powerful act. The ancients knew this and it frightened them. Mesopotamian society, for instance, did not want great reading from its scribes, only great writing. Scribes had to submit to a curious ruse: they had to downplay their reading skills lest they antagonize their employer. The Attic poet Menander wrote: "those who can read see twice as well." Ancient autocrats did not want their subjects to see that well. Order relied on obedience, not knowledge and reflection. So even though he was paid to read as much as write messages, the scribe's title cautiously referred to writing alone ( = "to write"); and the symbol for Nisaba, the Mesopotamian goddess of scribes, was not a tablet but a stylus. In his excellent book , Alberto Manguel writes, "It was safer for a scribe to be seen not as one who interpreted information, but who merely recorded it for the public good." In their fear of readers, ancients understood something we have forgotten about the magnitude of readership. Reading breeds the power of an independent mind. When we read well, we are thinking hard for ourselves--this is the essence of freedom. It is also the essence of editing. Editors are scribes liberated to not simply record and disseminate information, but think hard about it, interpret, and ultimately, influence it."
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|
reading
writing
editing
revision
freedom-of-thought
thought
writers
|
Susan Bell |
e4b4a34
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I didn't flee a dictator or swim an ocean to be an American like some do. I just thought long and hard about it.
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|
citizenship
thought
|
Craig Ferguson |
4b348df
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Cognitive science has something of enormous importance to contribute to human freedom: the ability to learn what our unconscious conceptual systems are like and how our cognitive unconscious functions. If we do not realize that most of our thought is unconscious and that we think metaphorically, we will indeed be slaves to the cognitive unconscious. Paradoxically, the assumption that we have a radically autonomous rationality as traditionally conceived actually limits our rational autonomy. It condemns us to cognitive slavery - to an unaware and uncritical dependence on our unconscious metaphors. To maximize what conceptual freedom we can have, we must be able to see through and move beyond philosophies that deny the existence of an embodied cognitive unconscious that governs most of our mental lives.
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|
metaphor
self-knowledge
illusion
freedom
reason
cognitive-science
embodied-mind
limitation
thought
|
George Lakoff |
686efc7
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Once started, love couldn't easily be stopped.
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|
love
not-easy
thought-to-ponder
thought
|
Larry McMurtry |
a0633e4
|
The crisis besetting America is not just an economic or political crisis; something deeper is wreaking havoc across the land, a mercenary and utilitarian attitude that demonstrates little empathy for people's actual well-being, that dismisses imagination and thought, branding passion for knowledge as irrelevant.
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|
imagination
thought
|
Azar Nafisi |
9345fba
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...for it is often to be observed of the shallower men, that they are the very last to despond. It is the glory of the bladder that nothing can sink it; it is the reproach of a box of treasure, that once overboard it must drown
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thought
soul
|
Herman Melville |
50c2cc0
|
[T]he concern of man is not his future but his present, not the world but his soul. We must be just, we must strive, we must engage ourselves with the business of the world for our own sake, because through that, and through contemplation in equal measure, our soul is purified and brought closer to the divine. ... Thought and deed conjoined are crucial. ... The attempt must be made; the outcome is irrelevant. Right action is a pale material reflection of the divine, but reflection it is, nonetheless. Define your goal and exert reason to accomplish it by virtuous action; successs or failure is secondary.
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|
mankind
present
future
success
philosophy
purification
deeds
souls
goals
divinity
failure
thought
|
Iain Pears |
50cfd6d
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This road will be new because you will see a given emotion as a choice rather than a condition of life.
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|
emotion
thought
|
Wayne W. Dyer |
88ef2b5
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"Many things the gods achieve beyond our judgement,'" said the sorrowful girl. "'What we thought is not confirmed and what we thought not God contives."
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|
religion
knowledge
thought
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John Irving |
a55c0de
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Revenge and rational thought never sleep together.
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|
revenge
thought
|
Kevin Hearne |
357e9dc
|
You despise the real bourgeois classes for all their snobbishness and their snobbish voices and ways. You do, don't you? Yet all you put in their place is a horrid little refusal to have nasty thoughts or do nasty things or be nasty in any way. Do you know that every great thing in the story of art and every beautiful thing in life is actually what you call nasty or has been caused by feelings that you would call nasty? By passion, by love, by hatred, by truth. Do you know that?
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|
hatred
thoughts
feelings
passion
beauty
life
love
truth
bourgeois
despise
horrid
refusal
snobbish
snob
classes
nasty
snobbishness
class
beautiful
thought
|
John Fowles |
21606da
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She had lost herself in this old work, her personality dissolving into it, so that she had been set free. The immortality of the soul lies in its dissolution; this was the cryptic comment that so frustrated Olivier and which Julien had only ever grasped as evidence for the history of a particular school of thought. He had known all about its history, but Julia knew what it meant. He found the realization strangely reassuring.
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|
immortality
freedom
meaning
philosophy
self-abandonment
liberation
thought
soul
|
Iain Pears |
7ab5131
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Up there in that room, as I see it, is the reading and the thinking-through, a theory of rivers, of trees moving, of falling light. Here on the river, as I lurch against a freshening of the current, is the practice of rivers. In navigating by the glow of the Milky Way, the practice of light. In steadying with a staff, the practice of wood.
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nature
spirit
practice
meditation
thought
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Barry Lopez |
9e31598
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"The brain is not nourished on beans and truffles but rather the food manages to reconstitute the molecules of the brain once it has been turned into homogeneous and assimilable substances, which potentially have the "same nature", as the molecules of the brain"
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diet
you-are-what-you-eat
thought
|
Antonio Gramsci |
65b0769
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"Last night I thought about all that kerosene I've used in the past ten years. And I thought about books. And for the first time I realized that a man was behind each one of the books. A man had to think them up. A man had to take a long time to put them down on paper. And I'd never even thought that thought before." He got out of bed. "It took some man a lifetime maybe to put some of his thoughts down, looking around at the world and life and then I come along in two minutes and boom! it's all over." "Let me alone," said Mildred. "I didn't do anything." "Let you alone! That's all very well, but how can I leave myself alone? We need not to be let alone. We need to be really bothered once in a while. How long is it since you were bothered? About something important, about something real?"
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|
time
world
books
reality
work
life
bother
kerosene
lifetime
reality-check
observation
real
important
create
ignorance
destruction
thought
creativity
creation
|
Ray Bradbury |
4868850
|
God, He didn't write the scripts for the puny little players down here. We wrote them ourselves-with each day we lived, each word we spoke, each thought we etched on our brains. And Momma had written her script, too. And a sorry one it was.
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|
living
god
life
down-here
each-day
scripts
spoke
written
spoken-words
speaking
players
mothers
thought
|
V.C. Andrews |
e939939
|
Power rests on the kind of knowledge one holds. What is the sense of knowing things that are useless?
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|
philosphy
life-lessons
life
power
thought
|
Carlos Castaneda |
6b9862c
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"It's funny, leaving a place, ain't it?" he said. "You never do know when you'll get back."
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|
funny-idea
getting-back
going-somewhere
leaving-a-place
never-know
thought-to-ponder
missed
ride
leaving
leave
traveling
home
thought
journey
|
Larry McMurtry |
ae181ef
|
What a huge inaccessible lumber-room of thought and experience we amounted to, I thought; how much we are, how little we transmit.
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|
life
inner-life
thought
|
H.G. Wells |
da1b5b6
|
"She shakily rushed towards the car to find Alecto casually standing beside it, smoking a cigarette and staring fixedly on the radio as it played the song 'Draggin' the Line' by Tommy James, his expression thoughtful. "What are you thinking about?" Mandy questioned. "Wouldn't the world be a very loud place to live if we said everything we thought?" Alecto asked quietly."
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|
live
mind
world
music
song
dragging
tommy-james
noisy
cigarette
line
place
quiet
radio
thinking
question
loud
noise
thought
smoking
|
Rebecca McNutt |
4fe8f18
|
Most people are not naturally reflective any more than they are naturally malicious, and the white man prefers to keep the black man at a certain human remove because it is easier for him thus to preserve his simplicity and avoid being called to account for crimes committed by his forefathers, or his neighbors.
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|
racism
blacks
whites
thoughtfulness
race-relations
reflection
race
guilt
thought
|
James Baldwin |
11b6adb
|
She had to strive to make every thought obedient to the love of Christ whatever violent feelings churned within her. She had to take her every thought captive to the obedience of Christ and leave no room for anger and jealousy and thoughts of revenge.
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|
jealousy
revenge
love
obedient
christ
thought
|
Francine Rivers |
39be2a2
|
And if I am not mistaken here is the secret of the greatness that was Spain. In Spain it is men that are the poems, the pictures and the buildings. Men are its philosophies. They lived, these Spaniards of the Golden Age; they felt and did; they did not think. Life was what they sought and found, life in its turmoil, its fervour and its variety. Passion was the seed that brought them forth and passion was the flower they bore. But passion alone cannot give rise to a great art. In the arts the Spaniards invented nothing. They did little in any of those they practised, but give a local colour to a virtuosity they borrowed from abroad. Their literature, as I have ventured to remark, was not of the highest rank; they were taught to paint by foreign masters, but, inapt pupils, gave birth to one painter only of the very first class; they owed their architecture to the Moors, the French and the Italians, and the works themselves produced were best when they departed least from their patterns. Their preeminence was great, but it lay in another direction: it was a preeminence of character. In this I think they have been surpassed by none and equalled only by the ancient Romans. It looks as though all the energy, all the originality, of this vigorous race had been disposed to one end and one end only, the creation of man. It is not in art that they excelled, they excelled in what is greater than art--in man. But it is thought that has the last word.
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|
literature
character
creation-of-man
spaniards
the-golden-age
the-last-word
art
thought
|
W. Somerset Maugham |
139179d
|
Worry, my son?...I am not worried now and I never have or will. You must learn to tell worry from thought, and thought from prayer. Sometimes a light will go from your life...and your life becomes a prayer, till you are strong enough to stand under the weight of your own thought again.
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|
strength-from-prayer
worry
thought
|
Richard Llewellyn |
51c1d87
|
To the Bullock Roseroot What's the thought you think all your life long? It must be a great one, a solemn one, to make you gaze through the world at it, all your life long. When you have to look aside from it your eyes roll, you bellow in anger, anxious to return to it, steadily to gaze at it, think it all your life long.
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|
poem
thought
|
Ursula K. Le Guin |
1dc4b66
|
"Common sense is not a single unique conception, identical in time and space. It is the "folklore" of philosophy, and, like folklore, it takes countless different forms. Its most fundamental character is that it is a conception which, even in the brain of one individual, is fragmentary, incoherent and inconsequential." --
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|
philosophy
thought
|
Antonio Gramsci |
6010375
|
The years would pass like weeks, and loves would pass too, or else grow sour.
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|
love
thought-to-ponder
years
passed
thought
|
Larry McMurtry |
b5ff7ef
|
In that one stolen second, I considered the Glebe girl. She entered my mind like a burglar, them vanished again, taking nothing. It was like the humiliation of the past had been dragged instantly from my back and left somewhere on the ground.
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|
entered-my-mind
taking-nothing
vanished
humiliation
thought
|
Markus Zusak |
82b8ced
|
There seemed no answer. He wasn't resigned to anything, he hadn't accepted or adjusted to the life he'd been forced into. Yet here he was, eight months after the plague's last victim, nine since he's spoken to another human being, ten since Virginia had died. Here he was with no future and a virtually hopeless present. Still plodding on. Instinct? Or was he just stupid? Too unimaginative to destroy himself? Why hadn't he done it in the beginning when he was in the very depths? What had impelled him to enclose the house, install a freezer, a generator, an electric stove, a water tank, build a hothouse, a workbench, burn down the houses on each side of his, collect records and books and mountains of canned supplies, even - it was fantastic when you thought about it - even put a fancy mural on the wall? Was the life force something more than words, a tangible, mind-controlling potency? Was nature somehow, in him, maintaining its spark against its own encroachments? He closed his eyes. Why think, why reason? There was no answer. His continuance was an accident and an attendant bovinity. He was just too dumb to end it all, and that was about the size of it.
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|
suicide
nature
life
life-force
meaning-of-life
survive
reasoning
purpose
survival
instinct
thought
|
Richard Matheson |
dda0c65
|
There is, after all, always something wonderful and touchingly beautiful about a young man, for the first time released from the bonds of schooling, making his first ventures toward the infinite horizon of the mind. At this point he has not yet seen any of his illusions dissipated, or doubted either his own capacity for endless dedication or the boundlessness of the world of thought.
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|
youth
learning
thought
|
Hermann Hesse |
031167c
|
By the mid-seventeenth century, the visible image has assumed far greater reality than the invisible thought.
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|
seventeenth-century
visible
invisible
thought
|
Thomas Cahill |
59df2a3
|
An ancient metaphor: thought is a thread, and the raconteur is a spinner of yarns - but the true storyteller, the poet, is a weaver.
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|
storytelling
thought
|
Robert Bringhurst |
bca19fe
|
Reading has not gone out of fashion in the last number of years, nor in the ones while you slept in the asteroid belt. Your relatives do not wish to expose themselves to deep thought, lest they be affected by it.
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|
reading
critical-thinking
thought
|
Anne McCaffrey |
ad9643d
|
..I buried myself in accomplishments, because with accomplishments, I believed I could control things, I could squeeze in every last piece of happiness before I got sick and died.. which I figured was my natural fate.
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|
fate
happy
achieve
death
life
perspective
control
thought
|
Mitch Albom |
0d011a7
|
I've seen what rational thought leads to. Dumbest people I ever met were intellectuals.
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|
rational
thought
|
Robert Ferrigno |
4469757
|
The afternoon had passed to a ghostly gray. She was struck by the immensity of things, so much water and sky and forest, and after a time it occurred to her that she'd lived a life almost entirely indoors. Her memories were indoor memories, fixed by ceilings and plastered white walls. Her whole life had been locked to geometries: suburban rectangles, city squares. First the house she'd grown up in, then dorms and apartments. The open air had been nothing but a medium of transit, a place for rooms to exist.
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|
nature
life
indoors
lake
growing-up
rooms
sky
house
home
thought
|
Tim O'Brien |
6dfa1d4
|
What happened to me? I asked myself. Morris's high, smoky voice took me back to my university years, when I thought rich people were evil, a shirt and tie were prison clothes, and life without freedom to get up and go - motorcycle beneath you, breeze in your face, down the streets of Paris, into the mountains of Tibet - was not a good life at all. What happened to me?
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|
travel
free
life
ideal
young
thought
|
Mitch Albom |
9fcbed2
|
If some mystical clarity of thought came when you looked death in the eye, then I knew Morrie wanted to share it. And I wanted to remember it for as long as I could.
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|
ill
time
death
share
remember
thought
dying
memory
|
Mitch Albom |
ff93de4
|
"There's the claim that the only progress made is in posing problems that scientists can answer. That philosophy never has the means to answer problems--it's just biding its time till the scientists arrive on the scene. You hear this quite often. There is, among some scientists, a real anti-philosophical bias. The sense that philosophy will eventually disappear. But there's a lot of philosophical progress, it's just a progress that's very hard to see. It's very hard to see because we see
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|
prejudice
progress
human-rights
science
philosophy
animal-rights
bigotry
thinking
thought
|
Rebecca Newberger Goldstein |
a7fc015
|
"DeWeese asks, 'Does this tie in with what you were doing on "Quality?"' 'It's the direct result of it,' I say. I remember something and look at DeWeese. 'Didn't you advise me to drop it?' 'I said no one had ever succeeded in doing what you were trying to do.' 'Do you think it's possible?' 'I don't know. Who knows?' His expression is really concerned. 'A lot of people are listening better these days. Particularly the kids. They're really listening... and not just at you- to you... to you. It makes all the difference."
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|
success
thinking
thought
|
Robert M. Pirsig |