Quotes About Genius
Because there is no greater evil than ignorance and the destruction of genius. Ignorance has been responsible for more death, more bigotry, and more sin than any other force. It is the destroyer of mankind.
~ Richelle Mead
BazillionQuotes.com
Adrian, you're a genius.
~ Richelle Mead
BazillionQuotes.com
there can't be two geniuses in the same bed.
~ Ridley Pearson
BazillionQuotes.com
Good strong hair,' he was fond of saying, 'means there's a good strong brain underneath.' 'Like Shakespeare,' Matilda had once said to him. 'Like who?' 'Shakespeare, Daddy.' 'Was he brainy?' 'Very, Daddy.' 'He had masses of hair, did he?' 'He was bald, Daddy.
~ Roald Dahl
BazillionQuotes.com
I padri e le madri sono tipi strani: anche se il figlio è il più orribile moccioso che si possa immaginare, sono convinti che si tratti di un bambino stupendo. Niente di male: il mondo è fatto così. Ma quando dei genitori cominciano a spiegarci che il loro orrendo pargolo è un autentico genio, viene proprio da urlare: — Presto, una bacinella! Ho una nausea tremenda!
~ Roald Dahl
BazillionQuotes.com
Evil is boring. Cynicism is pointless. Fear is a bad habit. Despair is lazy. Hopelessness is self-indulgent. On the other hand: Joy is fascinating. Love is an act of heroic genius. Pleasure is our birthright. Chronic ecstasy is a learnable skill.
~ Rob Brezsny
BazillionQuotes.com
LBJ) had what a journalist calls "a genius for analogy"— made the point unforgettably, in dialect, in the rhythmic cadences of a great storyteller. Master of the senate
~ Robert A. Caro
BazillionQuotes.com
That's exactly why we have to have you, Colonel - to solve problems that are elementary to a man of your genius - Ardmore felt slightly nauseated inside: this was worse than writing advertising copy - but which are miracles for the rest of us.
~ Robert A. Heinlein
BazillionQuotes.com
The typical American female is sure that she has genius as a couturière, as an interior decorator, as a gourmet cook, and, always, as a courtesan. Usually she is wrong on four counts. But don't try to tell her so." He had added, "Unless you can catch one not over twelve and segregate her, especially from her mother—and even that may be too late.
~ Robert A. Heinlein
BazillionQuotes.com
Conceited indeed! Aside from a cold appreciation of my own genius I felt that I was a modest man.
~ Robert A. Heinlein
BazillionQuotes.com
That night he wrote in his diary, Challenge a remaining taboo. It was that simple. He had always wanted to understand genius, and now he had the formula. Freud, living in an age that prized its own seeming rationality, had found one of the remaining taboos and dared to think beyond it: he discovered infant sexuality and the unconscious, among other things. Galileo had gone beyond the taboo Thou shalt not question Aristotle. Every great discovery had been the breaking of a taboo.
~ Robert Anton Wilson
BazillionQuotes.com
This parallelism between physics and psychology should occasion no great surprise. The human nervous system, after all — the mind in pre-scientific language — created modern science, including physics and quantum mathematics. One should expect to find the genius, and the defects, of the human mind in its creations, as one always finds the autobiography of the artist in the art-work.
~ Robert Anton Wilson
BazillionQuotes.com
Those extreme cases who take their heaviest imprint on the third circuit tend to grow up cerebrotonic. They are tall and skinny, because energy is perpetually drawn upward from the body into the head. The caricatured evil genius, Dr. Syvlanus in Superman, who was virtually all head, represents the extreme toward which this type seems to be evolving. Popular speech calls them "eggheads.
~ Robert Anton Wilson
BazillionQuotes.com
It is the fate of the genius to dwell alone.
~ Robert Bloch
BazillionQuotes.com
And if at whiles the bubble, blown too thin, Seem nigh on bursting,—if you nearly see The real world through the false,—what do you see? Is the old so ruined? You find you 're in a flock O' the youthful, earnest, passionate—genius, beauty, Rank and wealth also, if you care for these: And all depose their natural rights, hail you, (That 's me, sir) as their mate and yoke-fellow, Participate in Sludgehood
~ Robert Browning
BazillionQuotes.com
The word "genius" comes from the Latin, and originally referred to a guardian spirit that watched over the birth of each person; it later came to refer to the innate qualities that make each person uniquely gifted.)
~ Robert Greene
BazillionQuotes.com
Albert Einstein was an avid violinist. He believed that working with his hands in this way and playing music helped his thinking process as well. In
~ Robert Greene
BazillionQuotes.com
Over the centuries, people have placed a wall around such mastery. They have called it genius and have thought of it as inaccessible. They have seen it as the product of privilege, inborn talent, or just the right alignment of the stars. They have made it seem as if it were as elusive as magic. But that wall is imaginary.
~ Robert Greene
BazillionQuotes.com
You're a clever one. Her eyes twinkled with humor. We'll have very clever children.
~ Kerrelyn Sparks
BazillionQuotes.com
Genius is not a matter of intelligence, but of spirit; and we cannot speak accurately of the spirit in any language but music.
~ Kim Stanley Robinson
BazillionQuotes.com
Rather than admire the mediocre great men over whom passersby nudge each other in awe, I venerate the young, unknown geniuses who die in their teens, their souls shattered - delicate, phosphorescent glowworms that one must see to know they really did exist.
~ Knut Hamsun
BazillionQuotes.com
Genius in the popular sense has become common. (...) Rather than admire the mediocre great men over whom passersby nudge each other in awe, I venerate the young, unknown geniuses who die in their teens, their souls shattered - delicate, phosphorescent glowworms that one must see to know they really did exist.
~ Knut Hamsun
BazillionQuotes.com
No, I don't admire the genius. But I admire and love the result of the genius's activity in the world, of which the great man is only the poor necessary tool, only, so to speak, the paltry awl to bore with.
~ Knut Hamsun
BazillionQuotes.com
The verbal text of a play, especially one by a genius, is the manifestation of the clarity, the subtlety, the concrete power to express invisible thoughts and feelings of the author himself. Inside each and every word there is an emotion, a thought, that produced the word and justifies its being there.
~ Konstantin Stanislavski
BazillionQuotes.com
