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Author: Henri Bergson
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From the bottom to the top of the organized world we do indeed find one great effort; but most often this effort turns short, sometimes paralyzed by contrary forces, sometimes diverted from what it should do by what it does, absorbed by the form it is engaged in taking, hypnotized by it as by a mirror... |
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 12 December 2006 )
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Author: J. Alexander Gunn
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"What life and society require of each of us is a constantly alert attention, that discerns the outlines of the present situation, together with a certain elasticity of mind and body to enable us to adapt ourselves in consequence."[Footnote: Laughter, p. 18] |
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Last Updated ( Friday, 27 October 2006 )
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Author: Henri Bergson
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To the relations between phenomena, therefore, correspond symmetrically relations between the ideas. And the most general laws of nature, in which the relations between phenomena are condensed, are thus found to have engendered the directing principles of thought, into which the relations between ideas have been integrated... |
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Last Updated ( Friday, 16 September 2005 )
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Author: Henri Bergson
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We cannot insist too strongly that there is something artificial in the mathematical form of a physical law, and consequently in our scientific knowledge of things. |
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Last Updated ( Monday, 30 October 2006 )
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Author: Source: Wikipedia.org
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From the skit 'Take Your Pick' as featured in the Monty Python's Flying Circus TV show, Episode 20...
(Source: Wikipedia.org: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bergson#Monty_Python_reference) |
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Last Updated ( Friday, 22 September 2006 )
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