
“[W]e are none of us very good at silence. It says too much.”
Telling the Truth (1977)
The Natural West: Environmental History in the Great Plains and Rocky Mountains (2003)
“[W]e are none of us very good at silence. It says too much.”
Telling the Truth (1977)
Source: Thinking in Pictures: My Life with Autism
The Natural West: Environmental History in the Great Plains and Rocky Mountains (2003)
Source: The Expanding Circle: Ethics, Evolution, and Moral Progress (1981), Chapter 6, A New Understanding Of Ethics, p. 172
The New Divinity (1964)
Context: The entire cosmos is made out of one and the same world-stuff, operated by the same energy as we ourselves. "Mind" and "matter" appears as two aspects of our unitary mind-bodies. There is no separate supernatural realm: all phenomena are part of one natural process of evolution. There is no basic cleavage between science and religion; they are both organs of evolving humanity.
“[W]e now face a demand to make choices that is unparalleled in human history.”
The Paradox of Choice (2004)
From An Address to the Committee of Correspondence in Barbados (1766), ‘Of the Right to Freedom: and of Traitors’, as contained in A Library of American Literature: Literature of the revolutionary period, 1765-1787, ed. Edmund Clarence Stedman, C. L. Webster (1888), p. 176
“Tell them that we are all one living body that cannot be separated from nature.”