“Perhaps the less we have, the more we are required to brag.”
Source: East of Eden
Help us to complete the source, original and additional information
John Steinbeck366
American writer 1902–1968Related quotes
Aldo Leopold (1887–1948) American writer and scientist
"The Home Builder Conserves" [1928]; Published in The River of the Mother of God and Other Essays by Aldo Leopold, Susan L. Flader and J. Baird Callicott (eds.) 1991, p. 147.
1920s
Russell L. Ackoff (1919–2009) Scientist
Source: 1960s, Management misinformation systems, 1967, p. 149.
“Quality is conformance to requirements - nothing more, nothing less.”
Philip B. Crosby (1926–2001) Quality guru
Philip B. Crosby (1979), as cited in: Colin Morgan and Stephen Murgatroyd (1994), Total Quality Management In The Public Sector.
“What, no more? Tell the cook we require ten more courses.”
Ma Fuxiang (1876–1932) Chinese politician
In the Land of the Laughing Buddha – The Adventures of an American Barbarian in China, Upton Close, 2007, READ BOOKS, 272, 1-4067-1675-8, 440, 2010-06-28 http://books.google.com/books?id=DpQa22PJutwC&dq=arab+mercenaries+china&q=They+have+not+enjoyed+the+educational+and+political+privileges+of+the+Han+chinese%2C+and+they+are+in+many+respects+primitive#v=snippet&q=What%2C%20no%20more%3F%20Tell%20the%20cook%20&f=false, <br class="br">Variant: Tell the cook, that we will either have ten more courses or the crows will have him.
William Poundstone (1955) American writer
Part One, Entropy, Randomness, Disorder, Uncertainty, p. 57
Fortune's Formula (2005)
Joseph Priestley book Institutes of Natural and Revealed Religion
Vol. I : Part I : The Being and Attributes of God, § 1 : Of the existence of God, and those attributes which art deduced from his being considered as uncaused himself, and the cause of every thing else (1772)
Institutes of Natural and Revealed Religion (1772–1774)
Context: It may, perhaps, be true, though we cannot distinctly see it to be so, that as all finite things require a cause, infinites admit of none. It is evident, that nothing can begin to be without a cause; but it by no means follows from thence, that that must have had a cause which had no beginning. But whatever there may be in this conjecture, we are constrained, in pursuing the train of causes and effects, to stop at last at something uncaused.
That any being should be self created is evidently absurd, because that would suppose that he had a being before he had, or that he existed, and did not exist at the same time. For want of clearer knowledge of this subject, we are obliged to content ourselves with terms that convey only negative ideas, and to say that God is a being untreated or uncaused; and this is all that we mean when we sometimes say that he is self existent.
Lew Rockwell (1944) American libertarian author and editor
As quoted in "The Freedom of Association" http://www.lewrockwell.com/rockwell/freedom-of-association145.html (1 June 2010). <br class="br">2010s
“Poetry is no more, no less than a mosaic of words, so great exactness is required for each one.”
T. E. Hulme (1883–1917) English Imagist poet and critic
Notes on Language and Style (1929)