
Source: Let Your Life Speak: Listening for the Voice of Vocation (1999), p. 54
Source: Game Theory and Canadian Politics (1998), Chapter 4, Models of Metrication, p. 64.
Source: Let Your Life Speak: Listening for the Voice of Vocation (1999), p. 54
"A Defence of Humilities"
The Defendant (1901)
Context: Humility is the luxurious art of reducing ourselves to a point, not to a small thing or a large one, but to a thing with no size at all, so that to it all the cosmic things are what they really are — of immeasurable stature. That the trees are high and the grasses short is a mere accident of our own foot-rules and our own stature. But to the spirit which has stripped off for a moment its own idle temporal standards the grass is an everlasting forest, with dragons for denizens; the stones of the road are as incredible mountains piled one upon the other; the dandelions are like gigantic bonfires illuminating the lands around; and the heath-bells on their stalks are like planets hung in heaven each higher than the other.
Source: Journal, pp. 27-28
“Many a small thing has been made large by the right kind of advertising.”
Source: A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court (1889), Ch. 22
Quote of Friedrich, in C. D. Eberlein, C. D. Friedrich Bekenntnisse, pp. 72-73; as cited by Linda Siegel in Caspar David Friedrich and the Age of German Romanticism, Boston Branden Press Publishers, 1978, p. 36
it is possible that Friedrich refers critically in the second part of his remark to the Nazarenes
undated
De iride (On the rainbow) Note this prediction of optical scientific instruments like the telescope and microscope, not to be utilized until 250 years later.
Raymond, p. 367 https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=loc.ark:/13960/t80k3mq4s;view=1up;seq=409
Raymond, or Life and Death (1916)
“Forgiveness does not require us to close our eyes but rather to truly open them.”
Source: The Gift
The Age of Discontinuity (1969)
1960s - 1980s