“Until you can understand illogicality, and the meaningfulness of it, shun the Sufis except for limited, precise, self-evident services.”
Source: The Sufis
“The nobles had made reading unpopular, as it showed that one couldn’t afford to buy spells or magical devices, since one had to get knowledge to do things the ordinary way; even if this view held little logic, the king himself was known to insult readers as “bookfaces” or “unable to think for themselves, so they need to spout what others have said,” and these opinions became popular, as did most views expressed by the king or his son.”
Source: Dysmorphic Kingdom
“We can be the very first generation which fails to see the logic or pride in defining ourselves by anything else but what is found within ourselves: our values”
“When exercising gifted will-power, move boldly without hesitation. The reward for such decisiveness is increased confidence in what the heart knows, which the mind does not feel”
Source: From Within I Rise: Spiritual Triumph over Death and Conscious Encounters With the Divine Presence
“Thoughts are nothing but cause and effect.”
Source: Logicops
“Love and hatred only deal with feelings; they do not understand (the) logic.”
Source: LOVE, HATRED AND MADNESS
“We will always have enough reasons to justify what we believe and what we do not believe.”
Source: LOVE, HATRED AND MADNESS
“Then, the massive hands lifted the new people up to a pair of giant indescribable lips and whispered, in a fundamentally untranslatable Creator-language, something that meant, approximately: THIS TIME, BE KIND TO ONE ANOTHER. REMEMBER: EACH OF YOU WANTS TO BE HAPPY. AND I WANT YOU TO. EACH OF YOU WANTS TO LIVE FREE FROM FEAR. AND I WANT YOU TO. EACH OF YOU ARE SECRETLY AFRAID YOU ARE NOT GOOD ENOUGH. BUT YOU ARE, TRUST ME, YOU ARE.”
Source: The Brief and Frightening Reign of Phil
“Everybody, professors and students and Proctors the same, knew that if the sign said 'do not walk on the grass', one hopped. Anybody who didn't had failed to understand what Oxford was.”
Source: The Watchmaker of Filigree Street
“Thirty years ago, we used to ask: Can a computer simulate all processes of logic? The answer was yes, but the question was surely wrong. We should have asked: Can logic simulate all sequences of cause and effect? And the answer would have been no.”
Source: Mind and Nature: A Necessary Unity