Best 9 quotes of Brand Blanshard on MyQuotes

Brand Blanshard

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    Brand Blanshard

    Custom calls me to 't: What custom wills, in all things should we do't, The dust on antique time would lie unswept, And mountainous error be too highly heap't For truth to o'erpeer.

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    Brand Blanshard

    [How to think about a problem:] The first step is to make the problem specific . . . ; The second step is to form theories freely of how to rid yourself of that burden . . . ; The third step is to develop in foresight the consequences of your proposals . . . ; The fourth and final step in thinking is to compare the consequences of your proposals to see which is best in the light of your scheme of life as a whole . . . ; Whether you choose a vacation or a spouse, a party or a candidate, a cause to contribute to or a creed to live by - think!

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    Brand Blanshard

    I do not think that G. H. Hardy was talking nonsense when he insisted that the mathematician was discovering rather than creating, nor was it wholly nonsense for Kepler to exult that he was thinking God's thoughts after him. The world for me is a necessary system, and in the degree to which the thinker can surrender his thought to that system and follow it, he is in a sense participating in that which is timeless or eternal.

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    Brand Blanshard

    If science could get rid of consciousness, it would have disposed of the only stumbling block to its universal application.

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    Brand Blanshard

    Most men live like raisins in a cake of custom.

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    Brand Blanshard

    Once the anchor of reason has been cut, ones craft may go anywhere. One may become a St Francis or equally a Hitler.

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    Brand Blanshard

    Shakespeare without Othello, Lear, Macbeth and Hamlet would be all too much like Hamlet without the prince.

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    Brand Blanshard

    When the man who knows all about the fruit fly chromosomes finds himself sitting next to an authority on Beowulf, there may be an uneasy silence.

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    Brand Blanshard

    ...reality is a system, completely ordered and fully intelligible, with which thought in its advance is more and more identifying itself. We may look at the growth of knowledge … as an attempt by our mind to return to union with things as they are in their ordered wholeness…. and if we take this view, our notion of truth is marked out for us. Truth is the approximation of thought to reality … Its measure is the distance thought has travelled … toward that intelligible system … The degree of truth of a particular proposition is to be judged in the first instance by its coherence with experience as a whole, ultimately by its coherence with that further whole, all comprehensive and fully articulated, in which thought can come to rest.