Theodore Kaczynski book Industrial Society and Its Future
"Introduction", item 3
Industrial Society and Its Future (1995)
"Seventh Talk in Poona, 10 October 1948" http://www.jkrishnamurti.com/krishnamurti-teachings/view-text.php?tid=295&chid=4625&w=%22To+understand+oneself%22, J.Krishnamurti Online, JKO Serial No. 481010; Vol. V, p. 128 <br class="br">Posthumous publications, The Collected Works <br class="br">Context: To understand oneself, one needs enormous pliability, and that pliability is denied when we specialize in devotion, in action, in knowledge. There are no paths such as devotion, as action, as knowledge, and he who follows any of these paths separately as a specialist brings about his own destruction. That is, a man who is committed to a particular path, to a particular approach, is incapable of pliability, and that which is not pliable is broken. As a tree that is not pliable breaks in the storm, so a man who has specialized breaks down in moments of crisis.
Theodore Kaczynski book Industrial Society and Its Future
"Introduction", item 3
Industrial Society and Its Future (1995)
“I like the moment when I break a man's ego”
Bobby Fischer (1943–2008) American chess prodigy, chess player, and chess writer
“Way Down South in Dixie
(Break the heart of me)
They hung my black young lover
To a cross roads tree.”
Langston Hughes (1902–1967) American writer and social activist
"Song for a Dark Girl" (l. 1-4), from Fine Clothes to the Jew (1927)
“Life's had to break you down so you could be rebuilt”
Robin S. Sharma (1965) Canadian self help writer
Source: The Leader Who Had No Title: A Modern Fable on Real Success in Business and in Life
“Under Adverse conditions - some people break down, some break records”
Shiv Khera (1961) Indian politician
Source: You Can Win: A Step by Step Tool for Top Achievers
Russell Baker (1925–2019) writer and satirst from the United States
"The Plot Against People," The New York Times (1968-06-18)
“Directly the mulberry tree begins to make you circle, break off. Pelt the tree with laughter.”
Virginia Woolf book Three Guineas
Source: Three Guineas (1938), Ch. 2, p. 80
“You get tragedy where the tree, instead of bending, breaks.”
Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889–1951) Austrian-British philosopher
1929, p. 1
Culture and Value (1980)
“The atomic hypothesis which had worked so splendidly in Physics breaks down in Psychics.”
John Maynard Keynes (1883–1946) British economist
"Francis Ysidro Edgeworth", p. 286; Originally published in The Economic Journal, March 1926
Ref: en.wikiquote.org - John Maynard Keynes / Quotes / Essays In Biography (1933)
Essays In Biography (1933), Francis Ysidro Edgeworth