Choose language

Forgot your password?

Need a Spoofbox account? Create one for FREE!

No subscription or hidden extras

Login

#log

Read through the most famous quotes by topic #log




Our practice rather than being about killing the ego is about simply discovering our true nature.


Sharon Salzberg


#meditation #psychology #nature

The ultimate form of our technological achievement will be identical to the beginning state of this nature.


Toba Beta


#technology #nature

Humankind, which discovers its capacity to transform and in a certain sense create the world through its own work, forgets that this is always based on God's prior and original gift of things that are. People think that they can make arbitrary use of the earth, subjecting it without restraint to their wills, as though the earth did not have its own requisites and a prior God-given purpose, which human beings can indeed develop but must not betray.


John Paul II


#culture #earth #ecology #god #nature

Silicon-based life may be impossible for one other reason: silicon bonds readily dissolve in water.


Steven Johnson


#nature

The linages between the nodes that form the web of life- how delightful.


Gladys Chua


#interactions #nature #web-of-life #nature

There is, in fact, no need to drag politics into literary theory: as with South African sport, it has been there from the beginning. I mean by the political no more than the way we organize our social life together, and the power-relations which this involves; and what I have tried to show throughout this book is that the history of modern literary theory is part of the political and ideological history of our epoch. From Percy Bysshe Shelley to Norman N. Holland, literary theory has been indissociably bound up with political beliefs and ideological values. Indeed literary theory is less an object of intellectual enquiry in its own right than a particular perspective in which to view the history of our times. Nor should this be in the least cause for surprise. For any body of theory concerned with human meaning, value, language, feeling and experience will inevitably engage with broader, deeper beliefs about the nature of human individuals and societies, problems of power and sexuality, interpretations of past history, versions of the present and hopes for the future. It is not a matter of regretting that this is so — of blaming literary theory for being caught up with such questions, as opposed to some 'pure' literary theory which might be absolved from them. Such 'pure' literary theory is an academic myth: some of the theories we have examined in this book are nowhere more clearly ideological than in their attempts to ignore history and politics altogether. Literary theories are not to be upbraided for being political, but for being on the whole covertly or unconsciously so — for the blindness with which they offer as a supposedly 'technical', 'self-evident', 'scientific' or 'universal' truth doctrines which with a little reflection can be seen to relate to and reinforce the particular interests of particular groups of people at particular times.


Terry Eagleton


#literary-theory #political #politics #power-relations #social

A truth that's told with bad intent Beats all the lies you can invent.


William Blake


#logic #philosophy #religion #truth #religion

Man suffers only because he takes seriously what the gods made for fun.


Alan Wilson Watts


#metaphysics #philosophy #religion #tao #taoism

No matter what I said they insisted on thinking of God as something outside themselves. Something that yearns to take every indolent moron to His breast and comfort him. The notion that the effort has to be their own . . . and that the trouble they are in is all their own doing . . . is one that they can't or won't entertain.


Robert A. Heinlein


#religion #religion

The mind becomes like that on which it feeds.


Elton Trueblood


#professor-emeritus #theologian #religion






back to top