WRITING AND DANCE May 23, 2006
Posted by thenaturalist in Writing.add a comment
Alexander Pope wrote:
“True ease in writing comes from Art, not chance,
As those move easiest who have learned to dance.”
Maybe my rhythm theory of writing isn’t so far-fetched after all ….
HATRED May 13, 2006
Posted by thenaturalist in Interesting.add a comment
Commenting on today’s politicians, Alan Simpson (former Republican Senator from Wyoming) said, “Hatred corrodes the container that carries it.” As a culture, we’ve outlawed hate crimes. Maybe we should also outlaw “hate politics”. I wonder how politics would change if it became illegal–or at least unpopular–to hate?
SOLVING PROBLEMS May 7, 2006
Posted by thenaturalist in Einstein.add a comment
Albert Einstein once said, “You can’t solve a problem with the same mind that created it.”
DREAMS May 4, 2006
Posted by thenaturalist in Success, Thoreau.add a comment
In Walden, Henry David Thoreau says, “I learned this at least by my experiment: that if one advances confidently in the direction of his dreams, and endeavors to live the life which he has imagined, he will meet with a success unexpected in common hours.”
ANCIENT RHYTHMS May 4, 2006
Posted by thenaturalist in Interesting, Nature/Natural History, Rhythm/Rhythms.add a comment
According to Sigurd Olson, “When one finally arrives at the point where schedules are forgotten, and becomes immersed in ancient rhythms, one begins to live.”
ANTS May 4, 2006
Posted by thenaturalist in E. O. Wilson, Interesting, Nature/Natural History.add a comment
In his book In Search of Nature, Edward O. Wilson asks, “How have ants managed to stay on top of things for a period fifty times longer than the entire history of human beings and their immediate ancestors?
The truth is that we need invertebrates, but they don’t need us. If human beings were to disappear tomorrow, the world would go on with little change. Gaia, the totality of life on Earth, would set about healing itself and return to the rich environmental states of 100,000 years ago. But if invertebrates were to disappear, it is unlikely that the human species could last more than a few months. Most of the fishes, amphibians, birds, and mammals would crash to extinction about the same time. Next would go the bulk of the flowering plants and with them the physical structure of the majority of the forests and other terrestrial habitats of the world. The soil would rot. As dead vegetation piled up and dried out, narrowing and closing the channels of nutrient cycles, other complex forms of vegetation would die off, and with them the last remnants of vertebrates. The remaining fungi, after enjoying a population explosion of stupendous proportions, would also perish. Within a few decades the world would return to the state of a billion years ago, composed primarily of bacteria, algae, and a few other very simple multicellular plants.”
GROWING OLD May 1, 2006
Posted by thenaturalist in Age.add a comment
Fred Taylor’s obituary quoted someone named Frederic Ameil who said, “To grow old is the Master Work of wisdom and one of the most difficult chapters in the great art of living.” Something for me to think about ….