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Quotes About Motion

Love can no more continue without a constant motion than fire can; and when once you take hope and fear away, you take from it its very life and being.
~ Francois de La Rochefoucauld
The faster you go, the shorter you are.
~ Albert Einstein
Love works in a circle, for the beloved moves the lover by stamping a likeness, and the lover then goes out to hold the beloved inreality. Who first was the beginning now becomes the end of motion.
~ Thomas Aquinas
Mass is the property of objects that makes them resist changes in velocity. Simply
~ Jorge Cham
if you are on a rocket moving close to the speed of light relative to Earth, then your speed through space is very high. So in order for your total speed through space-time relative to Earth to stay within the speed limit of the universe, your speed through time has to decrease—as measured by clocks on Earth.
~ Jorge Cham
An enormous force bends all lines into circles.
~ Joseph Chilton Pearce
After the death of Archimedes in 212 BCE, the topic of motion was effectively abandoned; it did not resurface for another 1,400 years, when Gerard of Brussels revived the mathematical works of Euclid and Archimedes and came very close to defining speed as a ratio of distance to time.
~ Joseph Mazur
Time dilation, inconstancy of mass, and special relativity suggest that motion is indeed illusory.
~ Joseph Mazur
And our understanding of that motion remains fundamentally paradoxical.
~ Joseph Mazur
But no matter how finely calibrated our clocks are, they are always measuring something discrete—an interval, a repeating signal, a duration between events. This is the heart of the problem: We measure time as a duration and think of motion as continuous. The best definition of motion we have is intricately tangled between the discrete and continuous impressions of time and space.
~ Joseph Mazur
Events are like telephone poles, streaming back past the observation platform of a speeding train.
~ Erle Stanley Gardner
flash of silver as the craft streaked laterally
~ Ernest Cline
stood frozen as the robots lumbered by, joints clanking and servos whining.
~ Ernest Cline
Never confuse movement with action.
~ Ernest Hemingway
Never confuse movement with action.
~ Ernest Hemingway
obviously it matters little if we think of the earth as turning about on its axis, or if we view it at rest while the fixed stars revolve around it. Geometrically these are exacly the same case of a relative rotation of the earth and the fixed stars with respect to one another.
~ Ernst Mach
All the physical and chemical laws that are known to play an important part in the life of organisms are of this statistical kind; any other kind of lawfulness and orderliness that one might think of is being perpetually disturbed and made inoperative by the unceasing heat motion of the atoms.
~ Erwin Schrodinger
However insignificant the frictional and heating effects in a clock may be from the practical point of view, there can be no doubt that the second attitude, which does not neglect them, is the more fundamental one, even when we are faced with the regular motion of a clock that is driven by a spring.
~ Erwin Schrodinger
Now, I think, few words more are needed to disclose the point of resemblance between a clockwork and an organism. It is simply and solely that the latter also hinges upon a solid – the aperiodic crystal forming the hereditary substance, largely withdrawn from the disorder of heat motion.
~ Erwin Schrodinger
And why could all this not be fulfilled in the case of an organism composed of a moderate number of atoms only and sensitive already to the impact of one or a few atoms only? Because we know all atoms to perform all the time a completely disorderly heat motion, which, so to speak, opposes itself to their orderly behaviour and does not allow the events that happen between a small number of atoms to enrol themselves according to any recognizable laws.
~ Erwin Schrodinger
When a system that is not alive is isolated or placed in a uniform environment, all motion usually comes to a standstill very soon as a result of various kinds of friction; differences of electric or chemical potential are equalized, substances which tend to form a chemical compound do so, temperature becomes uniform by heat conduction.
~ Erwin Schrodinger
it is not possible to stand still or be stuck, because Energy, and therefore life, is always in motion. Things are always changing.
~ Esther Hicks
This is a universe of vibration. As Einstein once observed, "Nothing happens until something moves"-that is, everything vibrates to a particular measurable frequency. Break
~ Esther Hicks
I enter a room now not wondering what I am going to do or say, but what the risen Christ has already done, already said. I come in on a story that is in progress, something that is resurrection, already going on. Sometimes I can clarify a word, sharpen a feeling, help recover an essential piece of memory, but always dealing with what the risen Christ has already set in motion, already brought into being.
~ Eugene H. Peterson