
Source: Homegrown: Engaged Cultural Criticism
Cultural Anthropology and Psychiatry (1932), p. 515
Source: Homegrown: Engaged Cultural Criticism
The secret life of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, The Sydney Morning Herald, May 22, 2010, 2010-06-17 http://www.smh.com.au/technology/technology-news/the-secret-life-of-wikileaks-founder-julian-assange-20100521-w1um.html,
“time is the most valuable thing that we have, because it is the most irrevocable.”
Variant: Time is the most precious gift in our possession, for it is the most irrevocable.
Source: As quoted in LIFE magazine (22 April 1957), p. 152; also in Letters and Papers from Prison (1967), p. 47.
Context: Time is the most precious gift in our possession, for it is the most irrevocable. This is what makes it so disturbing to look back upon the time which we have lost. Time lost is time when we have not lived a full human life, time unenriched by experience, creative endeavor, enjoyment, and suffering. Time lost is time not filled, time left empty.
Source: Just a Theory: Exploring the Nature of Science (2005), Chapter 5, “Pseudoscience: What Some People Do Isn’t Science” (p. 93)
“Man's most valuable trait
is a judicious sense of what not to believe.”
The Complete Greek Tragedies: Euripides II: Helen. Hecuba. Andromache. The Trojan women. Ion. Rhesus. The suppliant women by David Grene, Richmond Alexander Lattimore (eds.), Modern Library, 1963, p. 73
“What is valuable is not new, and what is new is not valuable.”
From The Edinburgh Review, The Work of Thomas Young (c. 1802).
Source: Doing Virtuous Business (Thomas Nelson, 2011), p. 78.
Source: 2010s, Marked for Death (2012), Ch. 11: "The Facilitators", pp. 177–178
Address at the Hotel Fairmont in San Francisco (6 October 1909).