Jeffrey Moore
Author profile
born
Canada
gender
male
website
genre
About this author
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The Memory Artists
— published 2005 — 13 editions |
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Prisoner in a Red-Rose Chain
— published 1999 — 6 editions |
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The Extinction Club
— published 2010 — 7 editions |
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Military Neuropsychology
— published 2010 |
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Der Kuss Des Toren: Roman
by Jeffrey Moore, Chris Hirte — published 2003 |
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Peligro En Extincion
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Organizational DNA: Law of Virtue
— published 2007 |
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Creating the Preening Blue Wing Teal
by Jeffrey Moore, Donna S. Baker — published 2003 |
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Carving the Green-Wing Teal: Quick Tips for Hen and Drake
by Jeffrey Moore, Donna S. Baker — published 2001 |
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Twenty Something in the Twenty Something's
— published 2005 — 2 editions |
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“Scientists can talk about human nature,but only poets can free those feelings we keep in the pent heart”
― Jeffrey Moore, The Memory Artists
― Jeffrey Moore, The Memory Artists
“At the top of the heap is poetry,at least as it used to be written.Nothing else goes far,nothing goes as deep n the blood and soul.Shakespeare surpasses Beethoven because he had sound and meaning.Always remember that as you get older.Poetry is in the emprean,TV is in the pit”
― Jeffrey Moore, The Memory Artists
― Jeffrey Moore, The Memory Artists
“So why was the goddess of Memory linked with artistic creation,you may well ask"
"Because for the Greeks creativity wasn't associated with the idea of producing something new-as it is today.The artist built upon, or reworked, the great intellectual and cultural achievements of the past.
So a great memory,you see, was considered a key part of creative activity- it gave the artist more material to draw upon, as well as a richer, more complex intellect. When James Joyce said ' I invented nothing, but I forgot nothing either," I think he was referring to exactly this sort of thing. ”
― Jeffrey Moore, The Memory Artists
"Because for the Greeks creativity wasn't associated with the idea of producing something new-as it is today.The artist built upon, or reworked, the great intellectual and cultural achievements of the past.
So a great memory,you see, was considered a key part of creative activity- it gave the artist more material to draw upon, as well as a richer, more complex intellect. When James Joyce said ' I invented nothing, but I forgot nothing either," I think he was referring to exactly this sort of thing. ”
― Jeffrey Moore, The Memory Artists
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