“The new kind of music seems to create not from the heart but from the head. Its composers think rather than feel. They have not the capacity to make their works exalt - they meditate, protest, analyze, reason, calculate and brood, but they do not exalt.”
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Sergei Rachmaninoff12
Russian composer, pianist, and conductor 1873–1943Related quotes
“If I create from the heart, nearly everything works; if from the head, almost nothing.”
Marc Chagall (1887–1985) French artist and painter
G. K. Chesterton (1874–1936) English mystery novelist and Christian apologist
Twelve Types (1903) Charles II
Paul A. Samuelson (1915–2009) American economist
“My Life Philosophy: Policy Credos and Working Ways,” in M. Szenberg (ed.) Eminent Economists: Their Life Philosophies (1992)
1980s–1990s
“No being will do his most luminous and exalted thinking with his stomach a morgue.”
J. Howard Moore (1862–1916)
Source: The New Ethics (1907), The Food of the Future, p. 137
Karl Wilhelm Friedrich Schlegel (1772–1829) German poet, critic and scholar
Der Künstler darf eben so wenig herrschen als dienen wollen. 15 Er kann nur bilden, nichts als bilden, für den Staat also nur das thun, dass er Herrscher und Diener bilde, dass er Politiker und Oekonomen zu Künstlern erhebe.
“Ideas,” Lucinde and the Fragments, P. Firchow, trans. (1991), § 54
Garry Kasparov (1963) former chess world champion
Opening Gambit, Why Chess?, p. 4
2000s, How Life Imitates Chess (2007)
Edwin Howard Armstrong (1890–1954) American electrical engineer and inventor
As quoted in Electronics (2005) by P. Arun, p. 310
Context: Anyone who has had actual contact with the making of the inventions that built the radio art knows that these inventions have been the product of experiment and work based on physical reasoning, rather than on the mathematicians' calculations and formulae. Precisely the opposite impression is obtained from many of our present day text books and publications.