“Still, no matter how commonplace, one’s death is the most interesting event of one’s life.”
Robert Sheckley book Immortality, Inc.
Source: Immortality, Inc. (1959), Chapter 1 (p. 1)
All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten (1986)
“Still, no matter how commonplace, one’s death is the most interesting event of one’s life.”
Robert Sheckley book Immortality, Inc.
Source: Immortality, Inc. (1959), Chapter 1 (p. 1)
Jean de La Bruyère book Les Caractères
Il n'y a pour l'homme que trois événements: naître, vivre et mourir. Il ne se sent pas naître, il souffre à mourir, et il oublie de vivre.
Aphorism 48
Les Caractères (1688), De l'Homme
Boris Yeltsin (1931–2007) 1st President of Russia and Chairman of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR
Interview on Zerkalo http://web.archive.org/web/20021117080050/http://www.cdi.org/russia/johnson/6011-5.cfm (RTR) (29 December 2001) <br class="br">2000s <br class="br">Context: It looks as if some people either have a short memory and are forgetting about that time and the events that occurred then … Let us recall the putsch of August 19, 1991. It was after the putsch that the republics began, one after another, to declare their independence.<br>Russia also declared its independence. This was approved by the Supreme Soviet, and you know and remember that there was the Declaration on the Independence of Russia. So, the entire course of history was leading to a point when the regime, the political regime in the country had to be changed. It demonstrated that the Union was not as strong as this was loudly preached by mass media and the propaganda in general. The republics wished to become independent. This must only be welcomed... We have good peaceful relations and there were no military clashes. None of these countries had revolutions with bloody casualties and there was no civil war in any of the republics... Russia had to change and it did change.
John Allen Paulos (1945) American mathematician
Source: Innumeracy: Mathematical Illiteracy and its Consequences (1988), Chapter 2, “Probability and Coincidence” (pp. 37-38; ellipsis represents elision of examples)
“The way you answer life's events, and what you experience as your life, are really one.”
Guy Finley (1949) American self-help writer, philosopher, and spiritual teacher, and former professional songwriter and musician
Freedom From the Ties that Bind
Henri Barbusse (1873–1935) French novelist
Light (1919), Ch. XXIII - Face To Face
Context: When you look straight on, you end by seeing the immense event — death. There is only one thing which really gives the meaning of our whole life, and that is our death. In that terrible light may they judge their hearts who will one day die. Well I know that Marie's death would be the same thing in my heart as my own, and it seems to me also that only within her of all the world does my own likeness wholly live. We are not afraid of the too great sincerity which goes the length of these things; and we talk about them, beside the bed which awaits the inevitable hour when we shall not awake in it again. We say: —
"There'll be a day when I shall begin something that I shan't finish — a walk, or a letter, or a sentence, or a dream.".
“Revolution is not a one time event.”
Audre Lorde (1934–1992) writer and activist
Source: Sister Outsider: Essays and Speeches
Gaston Bachelard (1884–1962) French writer and philosopher
The Phoenix, a Linguistic Phenomenon, ch. 1
Fragments of a Poetics of Fire (1988)