Saturday, April 20, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

J. B. Priestley

« All quotes from this author
 

Much of writing might be described as mental pregnancy with successive difficult deliveries.
--
International Herald Tribune, January 3, 1978.

 
J. B. Priestley

» J. B. Priestley - all quotes »



Tags: J. B. Priestley Quotes, Success Quotes, Authors starting by P


Similar quotes

 

I became interested in writing this book approximately ten years ago when, having become established as a psychiatrist, I became increasingly impressed by the vague, capricious and generally unsatisfactory character of the widely used concept of mental illness and its corollaries, diagnosis, prognosis and treatment.
Although (mental illness) might have been a useful concept in the nineteenth century, today it is scientifically worthless and socially harmful.
In non-psychiatric circles mental illness all too often is considered to be whatever psychiatrists say it is. The answer to the question, Who is mentally ill? thus becomes: Those who are confined in mental hospitals or who consult psychiatrists in their private offices.

 
Thomas Szasz
 

Hypertext makes a virtue out of lack of organization, allowing ideas and thoughts to be juxtaposed at will. [...] The advent of hypertext is apt to make writing much more difficult, not easier. Good writing, that is.

 
Donald Norman
 

It is, I reckon, difficult to conceive of a single area of government policy that is at once so important for each of us, so catastrophically complicated, so insanely unjust, so obscenely ineffective, and has been quite so comprehensively cocked up by successive administratations as the British pension system.

 
Jon Henley
 

"Thinking is easy," said Goethe, "acting is difficult, and to put one's thought into action is the most difficult thing in the world." And Tolstoy: "It is easier to produce ten volumes of philosophical writing than to put one principle into practice."

 
Andre Maurois
 

In the mental disturbance and effort of writing, what sustains you is the certainty that on every page there is something left unsaid.

 
Cesare Pavese
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact