Source: Sun and Steel (1968), p. 9.
Context: Words are a medium that reduces reality to abstraction for transmission to our reason, and in their power to corrode reality inevitably lurks the danger that the words will be corroded too. It might be more appropriate, in fact, to liken their action to excessive stomach fluids that digest and gradually eat away the stomach itself.
Many people will express disbelief that such a process could already be at work in a person's earliest years. But that, beyond doubt, is what happened to me personally, thereby laying the ground for two contradictory tendencies within myself. One was the determination to press ahead loyally with the corrosive function of words, and to make that my life's work. The other was the desire to encounter reality in some field where words should play no part at all.
“The future is inevitable and precise, but it may not occur. God lurks in the gaps.”
"Creation and P.H. Gosse" ["La creacin y P.H. Gosse"]
Other Inquisitions (1952)
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Jorge Luis Borges 213
Argentine short-story writer, essayist, poet and translator… 1899–1986Related quotes
“Suppose our failures occur, not in spite of what we are doing, but precisely because of it.”
Source: The Divine Conspiracy: Rediscovering Our Hidden Life In God
“One way to pick a future is to believe it’s inevitable.”
Source: One
Interview with the Jewish Chronicle https://www.thejc.com/lifestyle/interviews/peter-singer-is-he-really-the-most-dangerous-man-in-the-world-1.34980, Dan Goldberg, 16 August, 2012.
“A speculator is a man who observes the future, and acts before it occurs.”
20,000 Quotes and Quips by Evan Esar (1968) original quote in Baruch, Bernard, The Public Years. NY, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1960, p.31.
"How Easy to See the Future", Natural History magazine (April 1975);
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