Saturday, May 11, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Michael Faraday

« All quotes from this author
 

As when on some secluded branch in forest far and wide sits perched an owl, who, full of self-conceit and self-created wisdom, explains, comments, condemns, ordains and order things not understood, yet full of importance still holds forth to stocks and stones around — so sits and scribbles Mike.
--
Of himself and his writing abilities, as quoted in A Random Walk in Science (1973) by Robert L. Weber, p. 76

 
Michael Faraday

» Michael Faraday - all quotes »



Tags: Michael Faraday Quotes, Authors starting by F


Similar quotes

 

A man is a fool who sits looking backward from himself in the past. Ah! what shallow, vain conceit there is in man! Forget the things that are behind. That is not where you live. Your roots are not there. They are in the present; and you should reach up into the other life.

 
Henry Ward Beecher
 

No story sits by itself. Sometimes stories meet at corners and sometimes they cover one another completely, like stones beneath a river.

 
Mitch Albom
 

Wisdom sits alone
Topmost in Heaven.

 
Nathaniel Parker Willis
 

When we play the fool, how wide
The theatre expands! beside,
How long the audience sits before us!
How many prompters! what a chorus!

 
Walter Savage Landor
 

History, like a vast river, propels logs, vegetation, rafts, and debris; it is full of live and dead things, some destined for resurrection; it mingles many waters and holds in solution invisible substances stolen from distant soils. Anything may become part of it; that is why it can be an image of the continuity of mankind. And it is also why some of its freight turns up again in the social sciences: they were constructed out of the contents of history in the same way as houses in medieval Rome were made out of stones taken from the Coliseum. But the special sciences based on sorted facts cannot be mistaken for rivers flowing in time and full of persons and events. They are systems fashioned with concepts, numbers, and abstract relations. For history, the reward of eluding method is to escape abstraction.

 
Jacques Barzun
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact