Brian > Brian's Quotes

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  • #1
    Stephen Jay Gould
    “I am, somehow, less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein’s brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops.”
    Stephen Jay Gould, The Panda's Thumb: More Reflections in Natural History

  • #2
    Stephen Jay Gould
    “The most important tactic in an argument next to being right is to leave an escape hatch for your opponent so that he can gracefully swing over to your side without an embarrassing loss of face.”
    Stephen Jay Gould

  • #3
    Stephen Jay Gould
    “The human mind delights in finding pattern—so much so that we often mistake coincidence or forced analogy for profound meaning. No other habit of thought lies so deeply within the soul of a small creature trying to make sense of a complex world not constructed for it.”
    Stephen Jay Gould, The Flamingo's Smile: Reflections in Natural History

  • #4
    Stephen Jay Gould
    “Scientists have power by virtue of the respect commanded by the discipline... We live with poets and politicians, preachers and philosophers. All have their ways of knowing, and all are valid in their proper domain. The world is too complex and interesting for one way to hold all the answers.”
    Stephen Jay Gould, Bully for Brontosaurus: Reflections in Natural History

  • #5
    Michael   Lewis
    “When you are a pessimist and the bad thing happens, you live it twice,' Amos liked to say. 'Once when you worry about it, and the second time when it happens.”
    Michael Lewis, The Undoing Project: A Friendship That Changed Our Minds

  • #6
    Martin Luther King Jr.
    “We have flown the air like birds and swum the sea like fishes, but have yet to learn the simple act of walking the earth like brothers.”
    Martin Luther King Jr.

  • #7
    Stephen Jay Gould
    “We are here because one odd group of fishes had a peculiar fin anatomy that could transform into legs for terrestrial creatures; because the earth never froze entirely during an ice age; because a small and tenuous species, arising in Africa a quarter of a million years ago, has managed, so far, to survive by hook and by crook. We may yearn for a ‘higher answer’– but none exists”
    Stephen Jay Gould

  • #8
    Stephen Jay Gould
    “The most erroneous stories are those we think we know best - and therefore never scrutinize or question.”
    Stephen Jay Gould

  • #9
    Stephen Jay Gould
    “The facts of nature are what they are, but we can only view them through the spectacles of our mind. Our mind works largely by metaphor and comparison, not always (or often) by relentless logic. When we are caught in conceptual traps, the best exit is often a change in metaphor — not because the new guideline will be truer to nature (for neither the old nor the new metaphor lies “out there” in the woods), but because we need a shift to more fruitful perspectives, and metaphor is often the best agent of conceptual transition.”
    Stephen Jay Gould, Bully for Brontosaurus: Reflections in Natural History



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