“No man was ever so completely skilled in the conduct of life, as not to receive new information from age and experience…”
No. 544 (24 November 1712)
The Spectator (1711-1714)
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Richard Steele13
British politician 1672–1729Related quotes
Robert Haugen (1942–2013) American economist
Source: The Inefficient Stock Market - What Pays Off And Why (1999), Chapter 12, The Forces behind the Technical Payoffs to Price History, p. 121
Muriel Rukeyser (1913–1980) poet and political activist
Source: The Life of Poetry (1949), p. 221
Context: Experience taken into the body, breathed-in, so that reality is the completion of experience, and poetry is what is produced. And life is what is produced.
To stand against the idea of the fallen world, a powerful and destructive idea overshadowing Western poetry. In that sense, there is no lost Eden, and God is the future. The child walled-up in our life can be given his growth. In this growth is our security.
Brian Campbell Vickery (1918–2009) British information theorist
and documents
Source: Meeting the challenge (2009), p. xxiii.
“The core of mans' spirit comes from new experiences.”
Jon Krakauer book Into the Wild
Source: Into the Wild
Juhani Pallasmaa (1936) Finnish architect
The Aura of the Sacred lecture Juhani Pallasmaa's Agora lecture "Christianity as Secularisation" (15 August 2012).
Talal Abu-Ghazaleh (1938) Jordanian businesspeople
January 6, 2004, World Bank Video Series, Amman, Jordan.
Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury (1671–1713) English politician and Earl
As quoted in Day's Collacon : An Encyclopaedia of Prose Quotations: (1884), p. 930; Actual quote: "That thro certain Humours or Passions, and from Temper merely, a Man may be completely miserable ; let his outward Circumstances be ever so fortunate." An inquiry concerning virtue, or merit, p. 52.