The more one thinks, the more one feels the hopeless immensity of man’s ignorance.
CHARLES DARWINMuch love much trial, but what an utter desert is life without love.
More Charles Darwin Quotes
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We are not here concerned with hopes or fears, only with truth as far as our reason permits us to discover it.
CHARLES DARWIN -
False facts are highly injurious to the progress of science.
CHARLES DARWIN -
The highest possible stage in moral culture is when we recognize that we ought to control our thoughts.
CHARLES DARWIN -
The world will not be inherited by the strongest, it will be inherited by those most able to change.
CHARLES DARWIN -
Often a cold shudder has run through me, and I have asked myself whether I may have not devoted myself to a fantasy.
CHARLES DARWIN -
We will now discuss in a little more detail the Struggle for Existence.
CHARLES DARWIN -
Even when we are quite alone, how often do we think with pleasure or pain of what others think of us – of their imagined approbation or disapprobation.
CHARLES DARWIN -
Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge.
CHARLES DARWIN -
The loss of tastes for poetry and music is a loss of happiness.
CHARLES DARWIN -
It is always advisable to perceive clearly our ignorance.
CHARLES DARWIN -
Freedom of thought is best promoted by the gradual illumination of men’s minds which follows from the advance of science.
CHARLES DARWIN -
Only the fittest will survive.
CHARLES DARWIN -
If every one were cast in the same mould, there would be no such thing as beauty.
CHARLES DARWIN -
Sympathy beyond the confines of man, that is, humanity to the lower animals, seems to be one of the latest moral acquisitions.
CHARLES DARWIN -
It is a cursed evil to any man to become as absorbed in any subject as I am in mine.
CHARLES DARWIN