The loss of tastes for poetry and music is a loss of happiness.
CHARLES DARWINThe world will not be inherited by the strongest, it will be inherited by those most able to change.
More Charles Darwin Quotes
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I have tried lately to read Shakespeare, and found it so intolerably dull that it nauseated me.
CHARLES DARWIN -
The more one thinks, the more one feels the hopeless immensity of man’s ignorance.
CHARLES DARWIN -
The moral faculties are generally and justly esteemed as of higher value than the intellectual powers.
CHARLES DARWIN -
I have called this principle, by which each slight variation, if useful, is preserved, by the term of Natural Selection.
CHARLES DARWIN -
In the long history of humankind (and animal kind, too) those who learned to collaborate and improvise most effectively have prevailed.
CHARLES DARWIN -
An agnostic would be the more correct description of my state of mind.
CHARLES DARWIN -
How paramount the future is to the present when one is surrounded by children.
CHARLES DARWIN -
It is not the biggest, the brightest or the best that will survive, but those who adapt the quickest.
CHARLES DARWIN -
Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge.
CHARLES DARWIN -
Light may be shed on man and his origins.
CHARLES DARWIN -
Man, wonderful man, must collapse, into nature’s cauldron, he is no deity, he is no exception.
CHARLES DARWIN -
The world will not be inherited by the strongest, it will be inherited by those most able to change.
CHARLES DARWIN -
I never gave up Christianity until I was forty years of age.
CHARLES DARWIN -
Blushing is the most peculiar and most human of all expressions.
CHARLES DARWIN -
What a book a devil’s chaplain might write on the clumsy, wasteful, blundering, low, and horribly cruel work of nature!
CHARLES DARWIN