Science and Spirit interview (2004) 
Context: All life has a kind of seamlessness. All creatures have to be aware of their environment, and there has been an evolution of the capacities needed for detecting increasingly complex stimuli. I have no problem calling this "meaning," since all creatures pick out meaningful facets of their environment. For the first creatures, these facets were physical and mediated by receptor proteins. Sperm and eggs find each other by protein shapes; photosynthetic bacteria find light by protein shapes. The impetus to figure out what's going on is still very much programmed into our highly complex brains.
                                    
“Man is a creature whose evolutionary environment has been the open air. His nerves, muscles, and senses have developed across three million years in contiguity with natural earth, crude stone, live wood, wind, and rain. Now this creature is suddenly--on the geologic scale, instantaneously--shifted to an unnatural environment of metal and glass, plastic and plywood, to which his psychic substrata lack all compatibility. The wonder is not that we have so much mental instability but so little.”
            Section 5 (p. 177) 
Short fiction, Rumfuddle (1973)
        
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Jack Vance 213
American mystery and speculative fiction writer 1916–2013Related quotes
                                        
                                        Second Thesis 
Idea for a Universal History from a Cosmopolitan Point of View (1784)
                                    
Source: The Mind of God: The Scientific Basis for a Rational World (1992), Ch. 8: 'Designer Universe', p. 194
                                        
                                        Genesis II, 18 (p. 9) 
The Pentateuch and Haftorahs (one-volume edition, 1937, ISBN 0-900689-21-8
                                    
Horeb: A Philosophy of Jewish Laws and Observances, translated by Isidor Grunfeld, London: Soncino Press, 1968, vol. II https://books.google.it/books?id=tEIIAAAAIAAJ, p. 292, sec. 415.
Source: 1990s and beyond, A McLuhan Sourcebook (1995), p. 276
Source: The Unfinished Autobiography (1951), Chapter 6
                                        
                                        context (2) "Editorial Slot" 
Stand on Zanzibar (1968)