"Susan Sontag: The Rolling Stone Interview" with Jonathan Cott (1978; published 4 October 1979)
Context: One of my oldest crusades is against the distinction between thought and feeling... which is really the basis of all anti-intellectual views: the heart and the head, thinking and feeling, fantasy and judgment. We have more or less the same bodies, but very different kinds of thoughts. I believe that we think much more with the instruments provided by our culture than we do with our bodies, and hence the much greater diversity of thought in the world. Thinking is a form of feeling; feeling is a form of thinking.
“Feelings are much stronger than thoughts. We are all led by instinct, and our intellect catches up later”
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Bono 172
Irish rock musician, singer of U2 1960Related quotes
Alas! What Boots the Long Laborious Quest?, l. 11 (1809).
1840s, Letters from New York (1843)
Source: Letters from New York http://www.bartleby.com/66/59/12260.html, vol. 1, letter 34
Page 68.
The Road to Mecca (1954)
http://www.gamespot.com/features/sidlegacy/interview.html
The Stark Munro Letters (1894)
Context: The more we progress the more we tend to progress. We advance not in arithmetical but in geometrical progression. We draw compound interest on the whole capital of knowledge and virtue which has been accumulated since the dawning of time. Some eighty thousand years are supposed to have existed between paleolithic and neolithic man. Yet in all that time he only learned to grind his flint stones instead of chipping them. But within our father's lives what changes have there not been? The railway and the telegraph, chloroform and applied electricity. Ten years now go further than a thousand then, not so much on account of our finer intellects as because the light we have shows us the way to more. Primeval man stumbled along with peering eyes, and slow, uncertain footsteps. Now we walk briskly towards our unknown goal.
A speech given at Manchester UK (18 October 1897) https://ivu.org/history/besant/text.html