Laura Penny (1975) Canadian journalist
Source: More Money than Brains (2010), Chapter One, Don't Need No Edjumacation, p. 4
Chanur's Legacy (1992)
Laura Penny (1975) Canadian journalist
Source: More Money than Brains (2010), Chapter One, Don't Need No Edjumacation, p. 4
George MacDonald (1824–1905) Scottish journalist, novelist
The Fantastic Imagination (1893)
Source: A Dish of Orts
Context: A fairytale, a sonata, a gathering storm, a limitless night, seizes you and sweeps you away: do you begin at once to wrestle with it and ask whence its power over you, whither it is carrying you? The law of each is in the mind of its composer; that law makes one man feel this way, another man feel that way. To one the sonata is a world of odour and beauty, to another of soothing only and sweetness. To one, the cloudy rendezvous is a wild dance, with a terror at its heart; to another, a majestic march of heavenly hosts, with Truth in their centre pointing their course, but as yet restraining her voice. The greatest forces lie in the region of the uncomprehended.
I will go farther. The best thing you can do for your fellow, next to rousing his conscience, is — not to give him things to think about, but to wake things up that are in him; or say, to make him think things for himself. The best Nature does for us is to work in us such moods in which thoughts of high import arise. Does any aspect of Nature wake but one thought? Does she ever suggest only one definite thing? Does she make any two men in the same place at the same moment think the same thing? Is she therefore a failure, because she is not definite? Is it nothing that she rouses the something deeper than the understanding — the power that underlies thoughts? Does she not set feeling, and so thinking at work? Would it be better that she did this after one fashion and not after many fashions? Nature is mood-engendering, thought-provoking: such ought the sonata, such ought the fairytale to be.
“Succes is a lousy teacher. It makes smart people think they can't lose.”
Bill Gates book The Road Ahead
The Road Ahead (1995)
Variant: Success is a lousy teacher. It seduces smart people into thinking they can't lose.
Jared Diamond book Guns, Germs, and Steel
Source: Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies
David Brooks (1961) American journalist, commentator and editor
David Brooks, as quoted in "Shields and Brooks on the GOP push to stop Trump" http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/shields-and-brooks-on-the-gop-push-to-stop-trump/ (4 March 2016), PBS NewsHour <br class="br">2010s
Max Planck (1858–1947) German theoretical physicist
Source: Scientific Autobiography and Other Papers