Dan Simmons idézet
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Dan Simmons amerikai író, főként a horror és sci-fi műfajokban alkot.

✵ 4. április 1948
Dan Simmons: 104   idézetek 0   Kedvelés

Dan Simmons: Idézetek angolul

“Dogma and hierarchy are endemic to such structures…indeed, such are the structures of any theocracy.”

Dan Simmons könyv The Rise of Endymion

Forrás: The Rise of Endymion (1997), Chapter 11 (p. 187)

“While I was obsessed with my own misery, there were other things occurring in the human universe.”

Dan Simmons könyv The Rise of Endymion

Forrás: The Rise of Endymion (1997), Chapter 21 (p. 422)

“The human mind gets used to strangeness very quickly if it does not exhibit interesting behavior.”

Dan Simmons könyv The Rise of Endymion

Forrás: The Rise of Endymion (1997), Chapter 12 (p. 227)

“War does not call for judgment,” I said, “merely survival.”

Dan Simmons könyv The Fall of Hyperion

Forrás: The Fall of Hyperion (1990), Chapter 14 (p. 105)

“Never make unsupportable assumptions about your enemies, Martin. It can be a fatal self-indulgence.”

Dan Simmons könyv The Rise of Endymion

Forrás: The Rise of Endymion (1997), Chapter 3 (p. 49)

“Yes, our DNA is unique but so is a salamander’s.”

Dan Simmons könyv Hyperion

Forrás: Hyperion (1989), Chapter 3 (p. 191)

“The Void Which Binds is touched by all of us who have wept with happiness, bidden a lover good-bye, been exalted with orgasm, stood over the grave of a loved one, or watched our baby open his or her eyes for the first time.”

Dan Simmons könyv The Rise of Endymion

Aenea is looking at me as she speaks, and I feel the gooseflesh rise along my arms.
“The Void Which Binds is always under and above the surface of our thoughts and senses,” she continues, invisible but as present as the breathing of our beloved next to us in the night. Its actual but unaccessible presence in our universe is one of the prime causes for our species elaborating myth and religion, for our stubborn, blind belief in extrasensory powers, in telepathy and precognition, in demons and demigods and resurrection and reincarnation and ghosts and messiahs and so many other categories of almost-but-not-quite satisfying bullshit.”
Forrás: The Rise of Endymion (1997), Chapter 20 (p. 400)

“Pascal’s Wager never appealed to me. It seems logically…shallow.”

Dan Simmons könyv The Rise of Endymion

“Perhaps because it posits only two choices,” said Aenea. Somewhere in the desert night, an owl made a short, sharp sound. “Spiritual resurrection and immortality or death and damnation,” she said.
“Those last two aren’t the same thing,” I said.
“No, but perhaps to someone like Blaise Pascal they were. Someone terrified of ‘the eternal silence of these infinite spaces.’”
“A spiritual agoraphobic,” I said.
Aenea laughed. The sound was so sincere and spontaneous that I could not help loving it. Her.
“Religion seems to have always offered that false duality,” she said, setting her cup of tea on a flat stone. “The silences of infinite space or the cozy comfort of inner certainty.”
Forrás: The Rise of Endymion (1997), Chapter 10 (p. 166)