Best 11 quotes of Yi-fu Tuan on MyQuotes

Yi-fu Tuan

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    Yi-fu Tuan

    A great city may be seen as the construction of words as well as stone.

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    Yi-fu Tuan

    All creative effort - including the making of an omelet - is preceded by destruction.

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    Yi-fu Tuan

    Animals are like humans, only more openly carnal and sexual, more openly and therefore more disarmingly absurd.

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    Yi-fu Tuan

    A spontaneous act of generosity, performed with unselfish grace is an example of moral beauty, as are certain acts of courage; genuine modesty is a possible example, as is selfless love. Although moral beauty is a natural gift, it is nevertheless more likely to emerge and flourish in societies that appreciate and encourage it.

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    Yi-fu Tuan

    Geography is the study of earth as the home of people

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    Yi-fu Tuan

    I feel a reassuring oneness with other people when I find that even my most intimate, anguished, socially inadmissible emotions and desires are known to others.... Kindred souls—indeed, my selves otherwise costumed—turn up in books in the most unexpected places. Discovering them is one of the great rewards of a liberal education. If I quote liberally, it is not to show off book learning, which at my stage of life can only invite ridicule, but rather to bathe in this kinship of strangers.

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    Yi-fu Tuan

    In a sense, every human construction, whether mental or material, is a component in a landscape of fear because it exists in constant chaos. Thus children's fairy tales as well as adult's legends, cosmological myths, and indeed philosophical systems are shelters built by the mind in which human beings can rest, at least temporarily, from the siege of inchoate experience and of doubt.

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    Yi-fu Tuan

    It is by thoughtful reflection that the elusive moments of the past draw near to us in present reality and gain a measure of permanence.

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    Yi-fu Tuan

    Place is security, space is freedom.

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    Yi-fu Tuan

    People tend to suppress that which they cannot express.

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    Yi-fu Tuan

    Take geography. Physical geography, which is a science, is considered difficult; human geography, which strives to be a science, is considered less difficult; humanistic geography, full of poetry and good feeling, is widely viewed as the softie of the three, taken up by the intellectually lazy or unprepared. Human geography studies human relationships. Under the influence of Marxism, it often shows them to be one of exploitation, using physical force when necessary and the subtler devices deception when not. Human geography's optimism lies in its belief that asymmetrical relationships and exploitation can be removed, or reversed. What human geography does not consider, and what humanistic geography does, is the role they play in nearly all human contacts and exchanges. If we examine them conscientiously, no one will feel comfortable throwing the first stone. As for deception, significantly, only Zoroastrianism among the great religions has the command, "Thou shalt not lie." After all, deception and lying are necessary to smoothing the ways of social life. From this, I conclude that humanistic geography is neglected because it is too hard. Nevertheless, it should attract the tough-minded and idealistic, for it rests ultimately on the belief that we humans can face the most unpleasant facts, and even do something about them, without despair.