Brian Setzler > Brian's Quotes

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  • #1
    Daniel Quinn
    “If the world is saved, it will not be saved by old minds with new programs but by new minds with no programs at all.”
    Daniel Quinn, The Story of B

  • #2
    Daniel Quinn
    “Thinkers aren't limited by what they know, because they can always increase what they know. Rather they're limited by what puzzles them, because there's no way to become curious about something that doesn't puzzle you.”
    Daniel Quinn, My Ishmael

  • #3
    Daniel Quinn
    “The world must live. We are only one species among billions. The gods don't love us any more than they love spiders or bears or whales or water lilies.”
    Daniel Quinn

  • #4
    Daniel Quinn
    “There's nothing fundamentally wrong with people. Given a story to enact that puts them in accord with the world, they will live in accord with the world. But given a story to enact that puts them at odds with the world, as yours does, they will live at odds with the world. Given a story to enact in which they are the lords of the world, they will ACT like lords of the world. And, given a story to enact in which the world is a foe to be conquered, they will conquer it like a foe, and one day, inevitably, their foe will lie bleeding to death at their feet, as the world is now.”
    Daniel Quinn, Ishmael: An Adventure of the Mind and Spirit

  • #5
    Daniel Quinn
    “Man's destiny was to conquer and rule the world, and this is what he's done.. almost. He hasn't quite made it, and it looks as though this may be his undoing. The problem is that man's conquest of the world has itself devastated the world. And in spite of all the mastery we've attained, we don't have enough mastery to stop devastating the world.. or to repair the devastation we've already wrought.”
    Daniel Quinn

  • #6
    Daniel Quinn
    “Once you learn to discern the voice of Mother Culture humming in the background, telling her story over and over again to the people of your culture, you’ll never stop being conscious of it. Wherever you go for the rest of your life, you’ll be tempted to say to the people around you, “how can you listen to this stuff and not recognize it for what it is?”
    Daniel Quinn, Ishmael

  • #7
    Daniel Quinn
    “Diversity is a survival factor for the community itself. A community of a hundred million species can survive anything short of total global catastrophe. Within that hundred million will be thousands that could survive a global temperature drop of twenty degrees—which would be a lot more devastating than it sounds. Within that hundred million will be thousands that could survive a global temperature rise of twenty degrees. But a community of a hundred species or a thousand species has almost no survival value at all.”
    Daniel Quinn, Ishmael: An Adventure of the Mind and Spirit

  • #8
    Daniel Quinn
    “I've been surprised by how many of you actually seem to believe that what you have is perfection. [...] A great many of you consciously or unconsciously think of evolution as a process of inexorable improvement. You imagine that humans began as a completely miserable lot but under the influence of evolution very gradually got better and better and better and better until one day the became what you are now, complete with frost-free refrigerators, microwave ovens, air-conditioning, minivans, and satellite telivision with six hundred channels. [...] In its root sense, 'wealth' isn't a synonym for 'money', it's a synonym for 'wellness'.”
    Daniel Quinn

  • #9
    Daniel Quinn
    “But we're not humanity, we're just one culture - one culture out of hundreds of thousands that have lived their vision on this planet and sung their song. If it were humanity that needed changing, then we'd be out of luck. But it isn't humanity that needs changing, it's just...us.”
    Daniel Quinn

  • #10
    Daniel Quinn
    “If you can’t discover what’s keeping you in, the will to get out soon becomes confused and ineffectual - "Ishmael”
    Daniel Quinn, Ishmael: An Adventure of the Mind and Spirit

  • #11
    Daniel Quinn
    “If you go to Singapore or Amsterdam or Seoul or Buenos Aires or Islamabad or Johannesburg or Tampa or Istanbul or Kyoto, you'll find that the people differ wildly in the way they dress, in their marriage customs, in the holidays they observe, in their religious rituals, and so on, but they all expect the food to be under lock and key. It's all owned, and if you want some, you'll have to buy it.”
    Daniel Quinn

  • #12
    Jalal ad-Din Muhammad ar-Rumi
    “The breezes at dawn have secrets to tell you
    Don't go back to sleep!
    You must ask for what you really want.
    Don't go back to sleep!
    People are going back and forth
    across the doorsill where the two worlds touch,
    The door is round and open
    Don't go back to sleep!”
    Rumi

  • #13
    Noam Chomsky
    “Either you repeat the same conventional doctrines that everybody else is saying,... [o]r else you say something which in fact is true, and it will sound like it's from Neptune.”
    Noam Chomsky, Propaganda and the Public Mind

  • #14
    Daniel Quinn
    “The world doesn't belong to us, we belong to it. Always have, always will. We belong to the world. We belong to the community of life on this planet--it doesn't belong to us. We got confused about that, now it's time to set the record straight”
    Daniel Quinn

  • #15
    Eckhart Tolle
    “You have so much to learn from your enemies.”
    Eckhart Tolle, A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life's Purpose

  • #16
    Daniel Quinn
    “I think what you're groping for is that people need more than to feel scolded, more than to be made to feel stupid and guilty. They need more than a vision of doom. They need a vision of the world and of themselves that inspires them.”
    Daniel Quinn, Ishmael: An Adventure of the Mind and Spirit

  • #17
    Eckhart Tolle
    “Once you have identified with some form of negativity, you do not want to let it go, and on a deeply unconscious level, you do not want positive change. It would threaten your identity as a depressed, angry or hard-done by person. You will then ignore, deny or sabotage the positive in your life. This is a common phenomenon.
    It is also insane.”
    Eckhart Tolle, The Power of Now: A Guide to Spiritual Enlightenment

  • #18
    Eckhart Tolle
    “Whatever you fight, you strengthen, and what you resist, persists.”
    Eckhart Tolle

  • #19
    Eckhart Tolle
    “To offer no resistance to life is to be in a state of grace, ease, and lightness. This state is then no longer dependent upon things being in a certain way, good or bad. It seems almost paradoxical, yet when your inner dependency on form is gone, the general conditions of your life, the outer forms, tend to improve greatly. Things, people, or conditions that you thought you needed for your happiness now come to you with no struggle or effort on your part, and you are free to enjoy and appreciate them - while they last. All those things, of course, will still pass away, cycles will come and go, but with dependency gone there is no fear of loss anymore. Life flows with ease.”
    Eckhart Tolle

  • #20
    Eckhart Tolle
    “When you don't cover up the world with words and labels, a sense of the miraculous returns to your life that was lost a long time ago when humanity, instead of using thought, became possessed by thought.”
    Eckhart Tolle, A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life's Purpose

  • #21
    Eckhart Tolle
    “every complaint is a little story the mind makes up that you completely believe in.”
    Eckhart Tolle, A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life's Purpose
    tags: life

  • #22
    Daniel Quinn
    “All too often the people of our culture think they’re really doing something if they’re out there fighting bad things and getting laws passed. Just look at what we’ve accomplished by outlawing drugs and waging a trillion-dollar War on Drugs! (Nothing!)”
    Daniel Quinn, The Invisibility of Success

  • #23
    Daniel Quinn
    “Donald Trump can do a lot of things I can't, but he can no more get out of the prison than I can”
    Daniel Quinn, Ishmael: An Adventure of the Mind and Spirit

  • #24
    Daniel Quinn
    “Pharaohs

    It took Khufu twenty-three years to build his Great Pyramid at Giza, where some eleven hundred stone blocks, each weighing about two and a half tons, had to be quarried, moved, and set in place every day during the annual building season, roughly four months long. Few commentators on these facts can resist noting that this achievement is an amazing testimonial to the pharaoh’s iron control over the workers of Egypt. I submit, on the contrary, that pharaoh Khufu needed to exercise no more control over his workers at Giza than pharaoh Bill Gates exercises over his workers at Microsoft. I submit that Egyptian workers, relatively speaking, got as much out of building Khufu’s pyramid as Microsoft workers will get out of building Bill Gates’s pyramid (which will surely dwarf Khufu’s a hundred times over, though it will not, of course, be built of stone).

    No special control is needed to make people into pyramid builders—if they see themselves as having no choice but to build pyramids. They’ll build whatever they’re told to build, whether it’s pyramids, parking garages, or computer programs.

    Karl Marx recognized that workers without a choice are workers in chains. But his idea of breaking chains was for us to depose the pharaohs and then build the pyramids for ourselves, as if building pyramids is something we just can’t stop doing, we love it so much.”
    Daniel Quinn, Beyond Civilization: Humanity's Next Great Adventure

  • #25
    Daniel Quinn
    “Our lifestyle is evolutionarily unstable--and is therefore in the process of eliminating itself in the perfectly ordinary way.”
    Daniel Quinn

  • #26
    Cherie Carter-Scott
    “Other people are merely mirrors of you. You cannot love or hate something about another person unless it reflects to you something you love or hate about yourself.”
    Cherie Carter-Scott, If Life Is a Game, These Are the Rules: Ten Rules for Being Human as Introduced in Chicken Soup for the Soul

  • #27
    Daniel Quinn
    “You shouldn't have to settle for rabbits if what you want is deer”
    Daniel Quinn, Ishmael: An Adventure of the Mind and Spirit
    tags: deep

  • #28
    Daniel Quinn
    “I’ve said that if there are still people here in 200 years, they won't be living the way we do, because if people go on living the way we do, there will BE no people here in 200 years. I stand by every word of this. That’s how people WON’T be living. But what about how they WILL be living? What I’ve said in the past is that I could no more say how people will be living in 200 years than Thomas Aquinas could have said how people would be living in the Renaissance 200 years later. I spoke the truth when I said that. I truly couldn’t at that time say how people will be living (if there are still people here in 200 years). I must now make only this change: Now I DO know how people will be living if there are still people here in 200 years. They will be living like the people in this book. Not all living one single way (for it remains true that there is no one right way for people to live), but they’ll all be living in ways that work. Because,”
    Daniel Quinn, The Invisibility of Success

  • #29
    Daniel Quinn
    “Is it so easy to change a cultural vision? Ease and difficulty are not the relevant measures. Here are the relevant measures: Readiness and unreadiness. If people aren’t ready for it, then no power on earth can make a new idea catch on. But if people are ready for it (and I think they are), then a new idea will sweep the world like wildfire.”
    Daniel Quinn, The Invisibility of Success

  • #30
    Daniel Quinn
    “CONTRARY TO THE COMMON ASSUMPTION , Charles Darwin did not originate the idea of evolution. By the middle of the nineteenth century, the mere fact of evolution had been around for a long time, and most thinkers of the time were perfectly content to leave it at that. The absence of a theory to explain evolutionary change didn’t trouble them, wasn’t experienced as a pressure, as it was by Darwin. He knew there had to be some intelligible mechanism or dynamic that would account for it, and this is what he went looking for—with well-known results. In his Origin of Species, he wasn’t announcing the fact of evolution, he was trying to make sense of that fact.”
    Daniel Quinn, The Invisibility of Success



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