Monday, December 23, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Richard Dawkins

« All quotes from this author
 

There has been progress in design, but not progress in accomplishment.
--
Chapter 7 “Constructive Evolution” (p. 186)

 
Richard Dawkins

» Richard Dawkins - all quotes »



Tags: Richard Dawkins Quotes, Authors starting by D


Similar quotes

 

After you have practiced for a while, you will realize that it is not possible to make rapid, extraordinary progress. Even though you try very hard, the progress you make is always little by little. It is not like going out in a shower in which you know when you get wet. In a fog, you do not know you are getting wet, but as you keep walking you get wet little by little. If your mind has ideas of progress, you may say, "Oh, this pace is terrible!" But actually it is not. When you get wet in a fog it is very difficult to dry yourself. So there is no need to worry about progress.

 
Shunryu Suzuki
 

Progress? There's no such thing as progress. There's only change. You dig a hole in the ground, you build up a city, and you fight a war, and you call it progress?

 
Charles Manson
 

I believe it safe to say that all progress must lead, not to further progress, but finally to the negation of progress, a return to the point of departure.

 
Eugene Delacroix
 

The attachment to a rationalistic, teleological notion of progress indicates the absence of true progress; he whose life does not unfold satisfyingly under its own momentum is driven to moralize it, to set up goals and rationalize their achievement as progress.

 
John Carroll
 

That there is a common cause, an that it is either what we call material progress or something closely connected with material progress, becomes more than an inference when it is noted that the phenomena we class together and speak of as industrial depression are but intensifications of phenomena which always accompany material progress, and which show themselves more clearly and strongly as material progress goes on. Where the conditions to which material progress everywhere tends are the most fully realized—that is to say, where population is densest, wealth greatest, and the machinery of production and exchange most highly developed — we find the deepest poverty, the sharpest struggle for existence, and the most of enforced idleness.

 
Henry George
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact