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#natur

Read through the most famous quotes by topic #natur




There are guys in the game only because of steroids. They couldn't make it with their natural talent, so they had to enhance themselves. It sucks.


David Wells


#enhance #game #guys #had #make

Bats drink on the wing, like swallows, by sipping the surface, as they play over pools and streams.


Gilbert White


#bats #drink #like #over #play

A morning-glory at my window satisfies me more than the metaphysics of books.


Walt Whitman


#books #me #metaphysics #more #satisfies

It is, I find, in zoology as it is in botany: all nature is so full, that that district produces the greatest variety which is the most examined.


Gilbert White


#district #examined #find #full #greatest

I thoroughly enjoy getting away from the game and going out fishing because it's so relaxing, so quiet and peaceful. I mean, there's no noise other than nature - and it's so different from what I do in a tournament situation that it just eases my mind.


Tiger Woods


#because #different #eases #enjoy #fishing

The pains of disconcerted or frustrated habits, and the inherent pleasure there is in following them, are motives which nature has put into our wills without generally caring to inform us why; and she sometimes decrees, indeed, that her reasons shall not be ours.


Chauncey Wright


#decrees #following #frustrated #generally #habits

Natural Selection never made it come to pass, as a habit of nature, that an unsupported stone should move downwards rather than upwards. It applies to no part of inorganic nature, and is very limited even in the phenomena of organic life.


Chauncey Wright


#come #downwards #even #habit #inorganic

Of course, there is no reconciliation between the theory of evolution by natural selection and the traditional religious view of the origin of the human mind.


E. O. Wilson


#course #evolution #human #human mind #mind

Marx was troubled by the question of why ancient Greek art retained an ‘eternal charm’, even though the social conditions which produced it had long passed; but how do we know that it will remain ‘eternally’ charming, since history has not yet ended? Let us imagine that by dint of some deft archaeological research we discovered a great deal more about what ancient Greek tragedy actually meant to its original audiences, recognized that these concerns were utterly remote from our own, and began to read the plays again in the light of this deepened knowledge. One result might be that we stopped enjoying them. We might come to see that we had enjoyed them previously because we were unwittingly reading them in the light of our own preoccupations; once this became less possible, the drama might cease to speak at all significantly to us. The fact that we always interpret literary works to some extent in the light of our own concerns - indeed that in one sense of ‘our own concerns’ we are incapable of doing anything else - might be one reason why certain works of literature seem to retain their value across the centuries. It may be, of course, that we still share many preoccupations with the work itself; but it may also be that people have not actually been valuing the ‘same’ work at all, even though they may think they have. ‘Our’ Homer is not identical with the Homer of the Middle Ages, nor ‘our’ Shakespeare with that of his contemporaries; it is rather that different historical periods have constructed a ‘different’ Homer and Shakespeare for their own purposes, and found in these texts elements to value or devalue, though not necessarily the same ones. All literary works, in other words, are ‘rewritten’, if only unconsciously, by the societies which read them; indeed there is no reading of a work which is not also a ‘re-writing’. No work, and no current evaluation of it, can simply be extended to new groups of people without being changed, perhaps almost unrecognizably, in the process; and this is one reason why what counts as literature is a notably unstable affair.


Terry Eagleton


#essence #human-nature #literature #value #age

Nature never did betray the heart that loved her.


William Wordsworth


#did #heart #her #loved #nature






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