Human Skills Quotes

Quotes tagged as "human-skills" Showing 1-6 of 6
Adrian Sandvaer
“One person may look and only see a tree, whereas others may look and see a tree with leaves.”
Adrian Sandvaer, Bright Moments - A Journey In The Human Mind

Reena McCarty
“Worse than the hunger, though, was the memory. I'd been here before. Elan brought me as a treat one day in early fall. I'd spent the six weeks previous up to my elbows in sticky, hot, miserable vats of huckleberries and apples, chokecherries and raspberries and peaches brought inn from the lake district by flying courier. The Wild King had ice caves under his palace, vast, magically controlled freezers that could have housed the fruit all winter with much less trouble, but he liked to have most of it processed. Human skill. Human labor, packing jam into blown-glass jars and sealing them with wax. Any othersider could keep fruit fresh. Only a human could see a pink and green apple and create a jar of golden jelly.”
Reena McCarty, The Tricky Business of Faerie Bargains

“The capital of any nation is capacity to enhance the development of human skills through education in any form.”
Lailah Gifty Akita

Sukant Ratnakar
“Adaptability is one of the most potent human skills.”
Sukant Ratnakar

Sukant Ratnakar
“People evolve first and systems later.”
Sukant Ratnakar, Quantraz

Gerald of Wales
“Among all the miracles in Kildare, none appears to me more wonderful than th marvellous book which they say was written in the time of the Virgin [ie. St. Bridgit] at the dictation of an angel. It contains the Four Gospels according to St. Jerome, and almost every page is illustrated by drawings illuminated with a variety of brilliant colours. In one page you see the countenance of the Divine Majesty supernaturally pictured; in another, the mystic forms of the evangelists, with either six, four, or two wings: here are depicted the eagle, there the calf; here the face of man, there of a lion; with other figures in almost endless variety. If you observe them superficially, and in the usual careless manner, you would imagine them to be daubs, rather than careful compositions; expecting to find nothing exquisite. But if you apply yourself to a more close examination, and are able to penetrate the secrets of the art displayed in these pictures, you will find them so delicate and exquisite, so finely drawn, and the work of interlacing so elaborate, while the colours with which they are illuminated are so blended, and still so fresh, that you will be ready to assert that all this is the work of angelic, and not human skill.”
Gerald of Wales, The History and Topography of Ireland