“[W]e are none of us very good at silence. It says too much.”
Frederick Buechner (1926) Poet, novelist, short story writer, theologian
Telling the Truth (1977)
The Natural West: Environmental History in the Great Plains and Rocky Mountains (2003)
“[W]e are none of us very good at silence. It says too much.”
Frederick Buechner (1926) Poet, novelist, short story writer, theologian
Telling the Truth (1977)
Temple Grandin (1947) USA-american doctor of animal science, author, and autism activist
Source: Thinking in Pictures: My Life with Autism
Dan Flores (1948) American historian
The Natural West: Environmental History in the Great Plains and Rocky Mountains (2003)
Peter Singer (1946) Australian philosopher
Source: The Expanding Circle: Ethics, Evolution, and Moral Progress (1981), Chapter 6, A New Understanding Of Ethics, p. 172
Julian Huxley (1887–1975) English biologist, philosopher, author
The New Divinity (1964)
Context: The entire cosmos is made out of one and the same world-stuff, operated by the same energy as we ourselves. "Mind" and "matter" appears as two aspects of our unitary mind-bodies. There is no separate supernatural realm: all phenomena are part of one natural process of evolution. There is no basic cleavage between science and religion; they are both organs of evolving humanity.
“[W]e now face a demand to make choices that is unparalleled in human history.”
Barry Schwartz book The Paradox of Choice: Why More Is Less
The Paradox of Choice (2004)
John Dickinson (1732–1808) American politician
From An Address to the Committee of Correspondence in Barbados (1766), ‘Of the Right to Freedom: and of Traitors’, as contained in A Library of American Literature: Literature of the revolutionary period, 1765-1787, ed. Edmund Clarence Stedman, C. L. Webster (1888), p. 176