
“Nature does nothing without purpose or uselessly.”
Act V, scene i.
Cato, A Tragedy (1713)
Book I, 1253a.8
Source: Politics
“Nature does nothing without purpose or uselessly.”
Act V, scene i.
Cato, A Tragedy (1713)
“Nature does nothing in vain, and in the use of means to her goals she is not prodigal.”
Third Thesis
Idea for a Universal History from a Cosmopolitan Point of View (1784)
Context: Nature does nothing in vain, and in the use of means to her goals she is not prodigal. Her giving to man reason and the freedom of the will which depends upon it is clear indication of her purpose. Man accordingly was not to be guided by instinct, not nurtured and instructed with ready-made knowledge; rather, he should bring forth everything out of his own resources.
Richter II p. 126 no. 837 books.google http://books.google.de/books?id=A7dUhbBfmzMC&pg=PA126
The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci (1883), I Prolegomena and General Introduction to the Book on Painting
In "How Little I Know", in Saturday Review (12 Nov 1966), 152. Excerpted in Buckminster Fuller and Answar Dil, Humans in Universe (1983), 31.
"The Comprehensive Man", Ideas and Integrities: A Spontaneous Autobiographical Disclosure (1963), 75-76.
1960s
“Darkness does not age; nothing is always nothing.”
“Light and Night,” p. 28
The Sun Watches the Sun (1999), Sequence: “Skywalking”
“One does not debate nature; one experiences nature.”
Source: Eifelheim (2006), Chapter XVIII (p. 327)
Swami Vivekananda as recorded in the complete works of Swami Vivekananda https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Complete_Works_of_Swami_Vivekananda/Volume_1/Lectures_And_Discourses/The_Hindu_Religion.
“How strange that nature does not knock, and yet does not intrude!”