“The most marvelous engineering feats have been performed each day, even more marvelous than they sometimes appear to our rather jaded sense of wonder. But how is it possible to appreciate these achievements when the very foundations of the profession are being attacked and appear to be crumbling? … The profession, for all its continuing technical achievements, finds itself at the present time in a Dark Age of the spirit.”
Source: The Existential Pleasures of Engineering (1976), p. 11
Help us to complete the source, original and additional information
Samuel C. Florman 3
American writer and civil engineer 1925Related quotes

p, 125
How Plants are Trained to Work for Man (1921) Vol. 5 Gardening

"Julius Caesar: An Appreciation of the Hollywood Production" in The Mercury (15 June 1916)
Letters and essays

"Lawyers and Social Ferment", 16 Harvard Law Journal (1962), p. 152.
“Women have been allowed to achieve individuality only though their appearance.”
The Dialectic of Sex (1970)

1790s, The Age of Reason, Part I (1794)
Context: As to the Christian system of faith, it appears to me as a species of Atheism — a sort of religious denial of God. It professes to believe in a man rather than in God. It is a compound made up chiefly of Manism with but little Deism, and is as near to Atheism as twilight is to darkness. It introduces between man and his Maker an opaque body, which it calls a Redeemer, as the moon introduces her opaque self between the earth and the sun, and it produces by this means a religious, or an irreligious, eclipse of light. It has put the whole orbit of reason into shade.

“Wonder not at the failures, rather learn to marvel at success.”
Junglezen Sheru ( Page 89 )

“If the stars should appear but one night every thousand years how man would marvel and adore.”
Source: 1830s, Nature http://www.emersoncentral.com/nature.htm (1836), Ch. 1, Nature
Context: If the stars should appear one night in a thousand years, how would men believe and adore, and preserve for many generations the remembrance of the city of God which had been shown!
Context: If the stars should appear one night in a thousand years, how would men believe and adore, and preserve for many generations the remembrance of the city of God which had been shown! But every night come out these envoys of beauty, and light the universe with their admonishing smile.
Gregory Bateson (1936) Naven: A Survey of the Problems Suggested by a Composite Picture p. 1