en

Hernan Diaz

  • cyherrerar2202has quoted2 months ago
    he study of nature is a barren enterprise if stones, plants, and animals become frozen under the magnifying glass, Lorimer said. A naturalist should look at the world with warm affection, if not ardent love.
  • cyherrerar2202has quoted2 months ago
    a caring, devoted appreciation for that creature’s unrepeatable individuality, and for the fact that, at the same time, strange as this may seem, this life stands for the entire natural kingdom.
  • cyherrerar2202has quoted2 months ago
    The hare, like a blade of grass or a piece of coal, is not simply a small fraction of the whole but contains the whole within itself. This makes us all one. If anything, because we are all made of the same stuff.
  • cyherrerar2202has quoted2 months ago
    The history of the transformation from viscous sponge to man, Lorimer said, could be read in the spine. Reminding Håkan of some of his fossils carved into yellow stone, Lorimer explained that in remote times, the spine was a flexible duct made of cartilage.

    lorimer's vision about the development of life on earth

  • cyherrerar2202has quoted2 months ago
    The inescapable and stunning conclusion of this was that human intelligence, in some form, must have preceded all organic matter on Earth.
  • cyherrerar2202has quoted2 months ago
    If confirmation of the existence of this first creature, this disembodied brain, could be found anywhere, it would be in Saladillo.
  • cyherrerar2202has quoted2 months ago
    His limited knowledge of the Bible, his common sense, and, above all, his own humanity made it impossible for him to believe that his seniors, no matter how removed, had been animals. Had he understood Lorimer’s rudimentary Swedish correctly? Even more outrageous and insulting was the notion of that primordial snot. Had he not been created in god’s image? What, then, was god?
  • cyherrerar2202has quoted2 months ago
    nd yet, despite his profound misgivings, Håkan felt his own past (with all that he thought he knew, with his father’s few firm words, with the minister’s unquestioned doctrine, and even with his brother’s lovely stories) dissolve into the night and fade in the presence of the impressive and awful history he had just heard.
  • cyherrerar2202has quoted2 months ago
    But the main virtue his brother and the naturalist shared was their ability to endow the world with meaning. The stars, the
  • cyherrerar2202has quoted2 months ago
    He reminded Håkan that life is a struggle against the downward pull of gravity – life is an ascending force that moves every plant and beast away from the dirt (and the same can be said about a creature’s moral evolution, by which it moves away from its primordial instincts towards a higher awareness).
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