quotations about nature
Nature has her language, and she is not unveracious; but we don't know all the intricacies of her syntax just yet, and in a hasty reading we may happen to extract the very opposite of her real meaning.
GEORGE ELIOT
Adam Bede
Nature! We are surrounded by her and locked in her clasp: powerless to leave her, and powerless to come closer to her. Unasked and unwarned she takes us up into the whirl of her dance, and hurries on with us till we are weary and fall from her arms.
JOHANN WOLFGANG VON GOETHE
The Maxims and Reflections of Goethe
Nature isn't just something that pushes up through the sidewalk cracks and keeps the farmers trapped in the sticks but is an elixir, a luxury that can be bought and fenced off and kept pure for the more fortunate, in an impure age.
JOHN UPDIKE
Rabbit is Rich
VR nature is dumbed-down nature. In the future, those using VR may be able to move around more and even choose their own route through an open VR space. That will allow more degrees of freedom, but when you bump your head into a VR rock, what happens to your head? Nothing! You're not bound by nature--but neither can you be freed through it.
PETER KAHN
"Technology is changing our relationship with nature as we know it", Quartz, August 8, 2017
Nature insists on whatever benefits the whole.
MARCUS AURELIUS
Meditations
Search out the wisdom of Nature, there is depth in all her doings.
MARTIN FARQUHAR TUPPER
Proverbial Philosophy
All nature is a vast symbolism: Every material fact has sheathed within it a spiritual truth.
E. H. CHAPIN
Living Words
Nature is full of wonders; every atom is a standing miracle, and endowed with such qualities, as could not be impressed on it by a power and wisdom less than infinite.
JOSEPH ADDISON
The Tatler, August 26, 1710
The line of Nature is crooked ... though we dig the canal beds as straight as we can, the rivers run hither and thither in their wildness.
WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS
Ideas of Good and Evil
Despite our strongly felt kinship and oneness with nature, all the evidence suggests that nature doesn't care one whit about us. Tornadoes, hurricanes, floods, earthquakes and volcanic eruptions happen without the slightest consideration for human inhabitants.
ALAN LIGHTMAN
"Our Lonely Home in Nature", The New York Times, May 2, 2014
Nature would be scarcely worth a puff of the empty wind if it were not that all Nature is but a temple, of which God is the brightness and the glory.
HENRY WARD BEECHER
Proverbs from Plymouth Pulpit
Nature is God perpetually working; and we need only look around us to see and to feel that truth of a Providence to which our deepest instincts turn.
E. H. CHAPIN
Living Words
Y'know, Nature's unpredictable -- that's why we had to tame her. Maybe we went too far, but in principle we made the right decision.
JEANETTE WINTERSON
The Stone Gods
Nature hides her secret because of her essential loftiness, but not by means of ruse.
ALBERT EINSTEIN
remark made during Einstein's visit to Princeton University, May 1921
All nature ... is a respiration
Of the Spirit of God, who, in breathing hereafter
Will inhale it into his bosom again,
So that nothing but God alone will remain.
HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW
The Golden Legend
The man or woman that sees no beauty in surrounding nature has a soul that sleeps.
T. AUGUSTUS FORBES LEITH
"On the Endless Beauty in Nature", Short Essays
Nature does nothing uselessly.
ARISTOTLE
Politics
The muffled syllables that Nature speaks
Fill us with deeper longing for her word;
She hides a meaning that the spirit seeks,
She makes a sweeter music than is heard.
GEORGE SANTAYANA
"Premonition", A Hermit of Carmel and Other Poems
Mankind, which has always been a part of nature, has reached a point where it is too much for nature to accommodate.
KOBO ABE
The Green Stockings
What people call defying nature is usually no more than human beings trying to stop its most harmful effects. This is not hubris, but a justified attempt to reduce suffering and improve the conditions for human life. It is why people put roofs on their homes, purify their water, or use mechanical transport to shrink the otherwise limiting aspects of distance. No one would object to these things, but still many have a sense that sometimes we go too far. But what is too far? It is surely not a matter of technological sophistication. An elaborate technology that cured cancer, for instance, would be welcomed, not rejected for being excessively artificial.
JULIAN BAGGINI
"Nature is not evil, simply amoral", The Independent, March 14, 2011