Date: 1891
"For what is mind but motion in the intellectual sphere?"
preview | full record— Wilde, Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills (1854-1900)
Date: 1922
"When the two gases previously mentioned are mixed in the presence of a filament of platinum, they form sulphurous acid. This combination takes place only if the platinum is present; nevertheless the newly formed acid contains no trace of platinum, and the platinum itself is apparently unaffected...
preview | full record— Eliot, T. S. (1888-1965)
Date: 1922
"The poet's mind is in fact a receptacle for seizing and storing up numberless feelings, phrases, images, which remain there until all the particles which can unite to form a new compound are present together."
preview | full record— Eliot, T. S. (1888-1965)
Date: 1959
Tolstoy has a "mind intoxicated with reason and fact."
preview | full record— Steiner, George (b. 1929)
Date: 1959
Dostoevsky advances "in the labyrinth of the unnatural, into the cellarage and morass of the soul."
preview | full record— Steiner, George (b. 1929)
Date: December 23, 2006
"Twentieth-century intellectuals can be defined by two extremes: the Paul Valéry types who made their discoveries in the abstract laboratory of their minds and the Graham Greene and Ernest Hemingway types who made their discoveries while drunk in brothels in countries where the president had just...
preview | full record— Moroney, Robin
Date: August 21, 2012
"Though her book is entitled 'In Praise of Messy Lives' (The Dial Press, 288 pp., $25), Ms. Roiphe’s mind is neat as a pin, untroubled by the unexpected inference, the awareness of mitigating factors in television or film or literature that might unmake her arguments."
preview | full record— D'Addario, Daniel