Nature always looks out for the preservation of the universe.
ROBERT BOYLEExalt your passion by directing and settling it upon an object the due con-templation of whose loveliness may cure perfectly all hurts received from mortal beauty.
More Robert Boyle Quotes
-
-
Darkness, that here surrounds our purblind understanding, will vanish at the dawning of eternal day.
ROBERT BOYLE -
The veneration, wherewith Men are imbued for what they call Nature, has been a discouraging impediment to the Empire of Man over the inferior Creatures of God. For many have not only look’d upon it, as an impossible thing to compass, but as something impious to attempt.
ROBERT BOYLE -
Female beauties are as fickle in their faces as in their minds; though casualties should spare them, age brings in a necessity of decay.
ROBERT BOYLE -
Even when we find not what we seek, we find something as well worth seeking as what we missed.
ROBERT BOYLE -
Sound consists of an undulating motion of the air.
ROBERT BOYLE -
In the Bible the ignorant may learn all requisite knowledge, and the most knowing may learn to discern their ignorance.
ROBERT BOYLE -
It is not strange to me that persons of the fair sex should like, in all things about them, the handsomeness for which they find themselves most liked.
ROBERT BOYLE -
In an arch each single stone which, if severed from the rest, would be perhaps defenceless is sufficiently secured by the solidity and entireness of the whole fabric, of which it is a part.
ROBERT BOYLE -
The book of nature is a fine and large piece of tapestry rolled up, which we are not able to see all at once, but must be content to wait for the discovery of its beauty, and symmetry, little by little, as it graduallly comes to be more and more unfolded, or displayed.
ROBERT BOYLE -
It is my intent to beget a good understanding between the chymists and the mechanical philosophers who have hitherto been too little acquainted with one another’s learning.
ROBERT BOYLE -
Exalt your passion by directing and settling it upon an object the due con-templation of whose loveliness may cure perfectly all hurts received from mortal beauty.
ROBERT BOYLE -
The inspired and expired air may be sometimes very useful, by condensing and cooling the blood that passeth through the lungs; I hold that the depuration of the blood in that passage, is not only one of the ordinary, but one of the principal uses of respiration.
ROBERT BOYLE -
God would not have made the universe as it is unless He intended us to understand it.
ROBERT BOYLE -
Well, I see I am not designed to the finding out the Philosophers Stone, I have been so unlucky in my first attempts in chemistry.
ROBERT BOYLE -
God may rationally be supposed to have framed so great and admirable an automaton as the world for special ends and purposes.
ROBERT BOYLE