
“One thing is needful — to 'give style' to one's character.”
Eins ist not.
Seinem Charakter 'Stil geben'.
Sec. 290
The Gay Science (1882)
Source: Favorite Poems
“One thing is needful — to 'give style' to one's character.”
Eins ist not.
Seinem Charakter 'Stil geben'.
Sec. 290
The Gay Science (1882)
Source: Modern thinkers and present problems, (1923), p. 37: Chapter 2. Benedict de Spinoza, 1632-1677
“Of Manners gentle, of Affections mild;
In Wit, a Man; Simplicity, a Child.”
"Epitaph on Gay" (1733), lines 1-2. Reported in The Poems of Alexander Pope, ed. John Butt, sixth edition (Yale University Press, 1970), p. 818. Compare: "Her wit was more than man, her innocence a child", John Dryden, Elegy on Mrs. Killegrew, line 70.
On the design of the Apple Cinema Display http://www.apple.com/displays/, in an article by Leander Kahney in Wired News magazine (June 2003)
“The simplicity of your character makes you exquisitely incomprehensible to me.”
Source: The Importance of Being Earnest
Lectures on Rhetoric and Belles Lettres (1784), Lecture XLIII: Homer's Iliad and Odyssey—Virgil's Aeneid.
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 545.
“You know how the divine Simplicity enfolds all things.”
Mind is the image of this enfolding Simplicity. If, then, you called this divine Simplicity infinite Mind, it will be the exemplar of our mind. If you called the divine mind the totality of the truth of things, you will call our mind the totality of the assimilation of things, so that it may be a totality of ideas. In the divine Mind conception is the production of things; in our mind conception is the knowledge of things. If the divine Mind is absolute Being, then its conception is the creation of beings; and conception in the human mind is the assimilation of beings.
ibid.
Source: Don Quixote de la Mancha (1605–1615), Part II (1615), Book III, Ch. 3.