Mitch Albom Tuesdays with Morrie
Variant: We are too involved in materialistic things, and they don't satisfy us. The loving relationships we have, the universe around us, we take these things for granted.
Source: Tuesdays with Morrie
Source: Better-World Philosophy: A Sociological Synthesis (1899), The Problem of Industry, pp. 19–20
Mitch Albom Tuesdays with Morrie
Variant: We are too involved in materialistic things, and they don't satisfy us. The loving relationships we have, the universe around us, we take these things for granted.
Source: Tuesdays with Morrie
“The inanimate universe is related to the animate as means to end.”
J. Howard Moore (1862–1916)
We conscious individuals manipulate it in manners best adapted to the satisfaction of our desires. We barricade its rivers, plow its seas, ingulf its vegetations, enslave its atmospheres, torture its soils, and perform upon it any other surgery or enormity that will help us in the satisfaction of these driving desires of ours. The inanimate is. if reason is not treason, the gigantic accessory of the consciousnesses that infest it. The animate environment, on the contrary, is related to each living being, not as means, but as end.
Source: Better-World Philosophy: A Sociological Synthesis (1899), The Social Problem, pp. 78–79
Giordano Bruno (1548–1600) Italian philosopher, mathematician and astronomer
Cause, Principle, and Unity (1584)
George Kubler (1912–1996) American art historian
Source: The Shape of Time, 1982, p. 1
Charles Caleb Colton (1777–1832) British priest and writer
Vol I; XXXVII
Lacon (1820)