Love and Death (1975)
“It is important to realize that the exercise of any skill depends on the ability to create an abstract system of some kind out of the totality of the world around us. For instance, the carpenter is not interested in wood as a biological or chemical entity. He is sensitive to many of its grosser physical properties but not to many subtler ones. The wood of a carpenter is not the real — that is, the complete substance — but merely wood as a material on which the carpenter can exercise his skill.”
Source: 1950s, The Skills of the Economist, 1958, p. 9
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Kenneth E. Boulding 163
British-American economist 1910–1993Related quotes
as quoted in 'Wooden Sculptures' http://www.zadkine.paris.fr/en/collections/collections-sculptures/wooden-sculptures, Musée Zadkine
Musée Zadkine: it was through wood that Zadkine came to sculpture, after being initiated in the techniques of carving by a maternal uncle.
undated quotes
Source: 1950s, The Skills of the Economist, 1958, p. 15
“They say a carpenter's known by his chips.”
Polite Conversation (1738), Dialogue 2
The Talented Tenth http://teachingamericanhistory.org/library/index.asp?document=174, published as the second chapter of The Negro Problem, a collection of articles by African Americans (New York: James Pott and Company, 1903)
“A jackass can kick a barn down, but it takes a carpenter to build one.”
Said during filmed conversation with reporters (c. 1953); reported in "Speak, Mister Speaker" (1978), p. 138.
Source: 1970s, Ecodynamics: A New Theory Of Societal Evolution, 1978, p. 20
Source: Sailing the Wine-Dark Sea: Why the Greeks Matter (2003), Ch. III The Poet: How to Party