“I almost think it is the ultimate destiny of science to exterminate the human race.”
Thomas Love Peacock book Gryll Grange
Gryll Grange, chapter XIX (1860).
Je crois qu'il faut presque toujours un coup de folie pour bâtir un destin.
Les yeux ouverts: entretiens avec Matthieu Galey [With Open Eyes: Conversations With Matthieu Galey] (1980)
“I almost think it is the ultimate destiny of science to exterminate the human race.”
Thomas Love Peacock book Gryll Grange
Gryll Grange, chapter XIX (1860).
“Misery is almost always the result of thinking.”
Joseph Joubert (1754–1824) French moralist and essayist
“I now know, by an almost fatalistic conformity with the facts, that my destiny is to travel…”
Ernesto Che Guevara (1928–1967) Argentine Marxist revolutionary
Source: The Motorcycle Diaries: Notes on a Latin American Journey
“There is no great genius without some touch of madness.”
Seneca the Younger (-4–65 BC) Roman Stoic philosopher, statesman, and dramatist
“I have always been — I think any student of history almost inevitably is — a cheerful pessimist.”
Jacques Barzun (1907–2012) Historian
Quoted in "Jacques Barzun '27: Columbia Avatar" http://www.college.columbia.edu/cct/jan06/cover.php by Thomas Vinciguerra, Columbia Today (January 2006)
“Men will always be mad, and those who think they can cure them are the maddest of all.”
Voltaire (1694–1778) French writer, historian, and philosopher
Les hommes seront toujours fous; et ceux qui croient les guérir sont les plus fous de la bande.
Letter to Louise Dorothea of Meiningen, duchess of Saxe-Gotha Madame (30 January 1762)
Citas
“People are almost always better than their neighbors think they are.”
George Eliot book Middlemarch
Source: Middlemarch
“No great mind has ever existed without a touch of madness.”
Aristotle (-384–-321 BC) Classical Greek philosopher, student of Plato and founder of Western philosophy
