"Poetry implies the whole truth. Philosophy expresses..." - Quote by Henry David Thoreau
Poetry implies the whole truth. Philosophy expresses a particle of it.
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More by Henry David Thoreau
“The true man of science will know nature better by his finer organization; he will smell, taste, see, hear, feel, better than other men. His will be a deeper and finer experience. We do not learn by inference and deduction and the application of mathematics to philosophy, but by direct intercourse and sympathy. It is with science as with ethics,--we cannot know truth by contrivance and method; the Baconian is as false as any other, and with all the helps of machinery and the arts, the most scientific will still be the healthiest and friendliest man, and possess a more perfect Indian wisdom.”
“Beware of any profession for which you must buy new clothes.”
“What avails it that another loves you, if he does not understand you? Such love is a curse.”
More on Philosophy
“The same thing may have all the kinds of causes, e.g. the moving cause of a house is the art or the builder, the final cause is the function it fulfils, the matter is earth and stones, and the form is the definitory formula.”
“To rove about, musing, that is to say loitering, is, for a philosopher, a good way of spending time, especially in that kind of mock rurality, ugly but odd, and partaking of two natures, which surrounds certain large cities, particularly Paris.”
“Others may know pleasure, but pleasure is not happiness. It has no more importance than a shadow following a man.”