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| Creative powers can just as easily turn out to be destructive. It rests solely with the moral personality whether they apply themselves to good things or to bad. And if this is lacking, no teacher can supply it or take its place | | (Carl Jung) |
| | You dehumanize a man as much by returning him to nature - by making him one with rocks, vegetation, and animals - as by turning him into a machine. Both the natural and the mechanical are the opposite of that which is uniquely human. Nature is a self-made machine, more perfectly automated than any automated machine. To create something in the image of nature is to create a machine, and it was by learning the inner working of nature that man became a builder of machines. It is also obvious that when man domesticated animals and plants he acquired self-made machines for the production of food, power, and beauty. | | (Eric Hoffer) |
| | If you see in any given situation only what everybody else can see, you can be said to be so much a representative of your culture than you are a victim of it. | | (S. I. Hayakawa) |
| | An idea is a feat of association. | | (Robert Frost) |
| | There is in us a lyric germ or nucleus which deserves respect; it bids a man to ponder or create; and in this dim corner of himself he can take refuge and find consolations which the society of his fellow creatures does not provide. | | (Norman Douglas) |
| | The most enviable writers are those who, quite often unanalytically and unconsciously, have realized that there are different facets to their nature and are able to live and work with now one, now another, in the ascendant. | | (Dorothea Brande) |
| | The thing that makes a creative person is to be creative and that is all there is to it. | | (Edward Albee) |
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| Anything too stupid to be said is sung. | | (Voltaire) |
| | If you develop an ear for sounds that are musical it is like developing an ego. You begin to refuse sounds that are not musical and that way cut yourself off from a good deal of experience. | | (John Cage) |
| | It is impossible to trap modern physics into predicting anything with perfect determinism because it deals with probabilities from the outset. | | (Sir Arthur Eddington, In J. R. Newman (ed.) The World of Mathematics, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1956) |
| | Beyond talent lie all the usual words: discipline, love, luck -- but, most of all, endurance. | | (James Baldwin) |
| | A man who works beyond the surface of things,though he may be wrong himself, yet he clears the way for others and may make even his errors subservient to the cause of truth. | | (Edmund Burke, A Philosophical Enquiry Into The Sublime and Beautiful) |
| | All is but lip-wisdom which wants experience. | | (Sir Philip Sidney) |
| | There is only one corner of the universe you can be certain of improving, and that is your own self. So you have to begin there, not outside, not on other people. That comes afterwards, when you have worked on your own corner. | | (Aldous Huxley) |
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