top of page
Quote_1.png
Barbara Kingsolver

"Humans are in love with the idea of our persisting,' he said. 'We fetishize it, really. Our retirement funds, our genealogies. Our so-called ideas for the ages."

Standard 
 Customized
"Humans are in love with the idea of our persisting,' he said. 'We fetishize it, really. Our retirement funds, our genealogies. Our so-called ideas for the ages."

Exlpore more Philosophy quotes

Quote_1.png
Asa Don Brown

"Thought, if I may put it, is the man behind the possession, appearance, things we like, things we hate and the very epitome of life."

Quote_1.png
Asa Don Brown

"Your subconscious mind is the universal mind with a universal consciousness."

Quote_1.png
Asa Don Brown

"Absolute is infinite so there is no absolute truth. There is truth that you can see in infinite ways and make your own."

Quote_1.png
Asa Don Brown

"Every aspect of your life will be enlivened when you start to think and communicate with your heart and mind in cohesive coordinated harmony."

Quote_1.png
Asa Don Brown

"Think about yourself because no one has time to think about you. Everyone is busy thinking about themselves."

Quote_1.png
Asa Don Brown

"I don't claim to know everything, Wally. I only claim that everything can eventually be known."

Quote_1.png
Asa Don Brown

"I don't know who you are or where you are, but I know your deep driving desires. I am writing to you to make your life a little easier and better."

Quote_1.png
Asa Don Brown

"There are two kinds of people:those who learned to love and those who didn't."

Quote_1.png
Asa Don Brown

"Any education that doesn't allow you to think freely is not an education but a prison."

Quote_1.png
Asa Don Brown

"I came to this world to bloom and spread my love to fill the world with happiness."

Explore more quotes by Barbara Kingsolver

Quote_1.png
Barbara Kingsolver
"People love to read about sins and errors, but not their own."
Quote_1.png
Barbara Kingsolver
"Why does a person spend money on a stamp to spout bile at a stranger?"
Quote_1.png
Barbara Kingsolver
"This is what it means to be alone: everyone is connected to everyone else, their bodies are a bright liquid life flowing around you, sharing a single heart that drives them to move all together. If the shark comes they will all escape, and leave you to be eaten."
Quote_1.png
Barbara Kingsolver
"Everyone should get dirt on his hands each day. Doctors, intellectuals. Politicians, most of all. How can we presume to uplift the life of the working man, if we don't respect his work?"
Quote_1.png
Barbara Kingsolver
"Every life is different because you passed this way and touched history."
Quote_1.png
Barbara Kingsolver
"Sometimes the strength of motherhood is greater than natural laws."
Quote_1.png
Barbara Kingsolver
"In Bobby Ogle's version of heaven everyone would wind up in one place, criminals and Muslims included."
Quote_1.png
Barbara Kingsolver
"But newspapers have a duty to truth,' Van said.Lev clucked his tongue. 'They tell the truth only as the exception. Zola wrote that the mendacity of the press could be divided into two groups: the yellow press lies every day without hesitating. But others, like the Times, speak the truth on all inconsequential occasions, so they can deceive the public with the requisite authority when it becomes necessary.'Van got up from his chair to gather the cast-off newspapers. Lev took off his glasses and rubbed his eyes. 'I don't mean to offend the journalists; they aren't any different from other people. They're merely the megaphones of the other people."
Quote_1.png
Barbara Kingsolver
"Independence is a complex word in a foreign tongue. To resist occupation, whether you're a nation or merely a woman, you must understand the language of your enemy. Conquest and liberation and democrac and divorce are words that mean squat, basically, when you have hungry children and clothes to get out on the line and it looks like rain."
Quote_1.png
Barbara Kingsolver
"It's the same struggle for each of us, and the same path out: the utterly simple, infinitely wise ultimately defiant act of loving one thing and then another, loving our way back to life... Maybe being perfectly happy is not really the point. Maybe that is only some modern American dream of the point, while the truer measure of humanity is the distance we must travel in our lives, time and again, "twixt two extremes of passion--joy and grief," as Shakespeare put it. However much I've lost, what remains to me is that I can still speak to name the things I love. And I can look for safety in giving myself away to the world's least losable things."
bottom of page