“Water and air, the two essential fluids on which all life depends, have become global garbage cans.”
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Jacques-Yves Cousteau21
French naval officer, explorer, conservationist, filmmaker,… 1910–1997Related quotes
“Dads—like moms, air, and water—are essential to our lives.”
Warren Farrell (1943) author, spokesperson, expert witness, political candidate
Source: The Boy Crisis (2018), pp. 105
John Ruskin (1819–1900) English writer and art critic
Praeterita, volume I, chapter IX (1885-1889).
Context: My entire delight was in observing without being myself noticed,— if I could have been invisible, all the better. I was absolutely interested in men and their ways, as I was interested in marmots and chamois, in tomtits and trout. If only they would stay still and let me look at them, and not get into their holes and up their heights! The living inhabitation of the world — the grazing and nesting in it, — the spiritual power of the air, the rocks, the waters, to be in the midst of it, and rejoice and wonder at it, and help it if I could, — happier if it needed no help of mine, — this was the essential love of Nature in me, this the root of all that I have usefully become, and the light of all that I have rightly learned.
Morarji Desai (1896–1995) Former Indian Finance Minister, Freedom Fighters, Former prime minister
As quoted in Change your Body - Is your Body Acidic or Alkaline? http://books.google.co.in/books?id=n4iZAgAAQBAJ&pg=PT44 (2014) by Monica Wright, and Matt Thom, p. 44
Robert Grosseteste (1175–1253) English bishop and philosopher
Commentarius in VIII Libros Physicorum Aristoteles (c. 1230-1235)
James Madison (1751–1836) 4th president of the United States (1809 to 1817)
Federalist No. 10
1780s, Federalist Papers (1787–1788)
Barry Goldwater (1909–1998) American politician
With No Apologies (1979)
Context: My faith in the future rests squarely on the belief that man, if he doesn't first destroy himself, will find new answers in the universe, new technologies, new disciplines, which will contribute to a vastly different and better world in the twenty-first century. Recalling what has happened in my short lifetime in the fields of communication and transportation and the life sciences, I marvel at the pessimists who tell us that we have reached the end of our productive capacity, who project a future of primarily dividing up what we now have and making do with less. To my mind the single essential element on which all discoveries will be dependent is human freedom.
Paracelsus (1493–1541) Swiss physician and alchemist
Paracelsus - Collected Writings Vol. I (1926) edited by Bernhard Aschner, p. 110