“I might not have believed this if a Human had said it. Humans said one thing with their bodies and another with their mouths and everybody had to spend time and energy figuring out what they really meant.”
Source: Imago (1989), Chapter I, “Metamorphosis” section 4 (p. 548)
Help us to complete the source, original and additional information
Octavia E. Butler107
American science fiction writer 1947–2006Related quotes
Norman Cousins (1915–1990) American journalist
http://books.google.com/books?id=XFmDIpxyI_sC&q=%22It+all+began+I+said+when+I+decided+that+some+experts+don't+really+know+enough+to+make+a+pronouncement+of+doom+on+a+human+being+And+I+said+I+hoped+they+would+be+careful+about+what+they+said+to+others+they+might+be+believed+and+that+could+be+the+beginning+of+the+end%22&pg=PA160#v=onepage <br class="br">Anatomy of an Illness (1979)
Edward Rutherfurd (1948) British writer
Source: Russka: the Novel of Russia
Alexander McCall Smith book 44 Scotland Street
44 Scotland Street, chapter 1.
The 44 Scotland Street series
Robert Cormier book Beyond the Chocolate War
Source: Beyond the Chocolate War (1985), p. 81
Mark Rothko (1903–1970) American painter
Rothko, explaining Seitz his new way of painting during the mid-1940s
Abstract Expressionist Painting in America, W.C, Seitz, Cambridge Massachusetts, 1983, p. 142
after 1970, posthumous
Clifford D. Simak book Ring Around the Sun
Ring Around the Sun (1954)
Context: There was no time, Hezekiah had said. No such thing as time in the terms of normal human thought. Time was bracketed and each of its brackets contained a single phase of a universe so vastly beyond human comprehension that it brought a man up short against the impossibility of envisioning it.
And time itself? Time was a never-ending medium that stretched into the future and the past — except there was no future and no past, but an infinite number of brackets, extending either way, each bracket enclosing its single phase of the Universe.
Back on Man's original Earth, there had been speculation on travelling in time, of going back into yesterday or forward into tomorrow. And now he knew that you could not do it, that the same instant of time remained forever within each bracket, that Man's Earth had ridden the same bubble of the single instant from the time of its genesis and that it would die and come to nothing within that self-same instant.
You could travel in time, of course, but there would be no yesterday and no tomorrow. But if you held a certain time sense you could break from one bracket to another, and when you did you would not find yesterday or tomorrow, but another world.