Charles A. Reich book The Greening of America
Source: The Greening of America (1970), Chapter XI : Revolution By Consciousness, p. 301
Source: Discipline and Punish (1977), Chapter One, The Spectacle of the Scaffold
Charles A. Reich book The Greening of America
Source: The Greening of America (1970), Chapter XI : Revolution By Consciousness, p. 301
“The strong man holds in a living blend strongly marked opposites.”
Martin Luther King, Jr. (1929–1968) American clergyman, activist, and leader in the American Civil Rights Movement
Source: 1960s, Strength to Love (1963), Ch. 1 : A tough mind and a tender heart
Context: The strong man holds in a living blend strongly marked opposites. The idealists are usually not realistic, and the realists are not usually idealistic. The militant are not generally known to be passive, nor the passive to be militant. Seldom are the humble self-assertive, or the self-assertive humble. But life at its best is a creative synthesis of opposites in fruitful harmony. The philosopher Hegel said that truth is found neither in the thesis nor the antithesis, but in the emergent synthesis which reconciles the two.
“I hold that a strongly marked personality can influence descendants for generations.”
Beatrix Potter (1866–1943) English children's writer and illustrator
Carl Sagan (1934–1996) American astrophysicist, cosmologist, author and science educator
The Varieties of Scientific Experience: A Personal View of the Search for God (2006)
Jacob Bronowski (1908–1974) Polish-born British mathematician
Part 3: "The Sense of Human Dignity", §1 (p. 52)
Science and Human Values (1956, 1965)
Context: No fact in the world is instant, infinitesimal and ultimate, a single mark. There are, I hold, no atomic facts. In the language of science, every fact is a field — a crisscross of implications, those that lead to it and those that lead from it. … We condense the laws around concepts. Science takes its coherence, its intellectual and imaginative strength together, from the concepts at which its laws cross, like knots in a mesh.
Pierre Louis Maupertuis (1698–1759) French mathematician, philosopher and man of letters
Les Oeuvres De Mr. De Maupertuis (1752) vol. iv p. 22; as quoted by Philip Edward Bertrand Jourdain, The Principle of Least Action (1913) p. 6.
Brian Campbell Vickery (1918–2009) British information theorist
Have things changed?
Source: A Long Search for Information (2004), p. 25; As cited in: Lyn Robinson and David Bawden (2011).
“I still carry the marks on my body of what those "German supermen" did to me then.”
Irena Sendler (1910–2008) Polish resistance fighter and Holocaust rescuer
Referring to Nazi doctrines that German "Aryans" were a "master-race" of "supermen", as quoted in "Holocaust heroine's survival tale" by Adam Easton in BBC News (3 March 2005)
Context: I still carry the marks on my body of what those "German supermen" did to me then. I was sentenced to death.
Jane Roberts (1929–1984) American Writer
Source: Seth, Dreams & Projections of Consciousness, (1986), p. 347, quoting from Session 276