Lewis Thomas Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Lewis Thomas's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Physician Lewis Thomas's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 4 quotes on this page collected since November 25, 1913! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
  • For total greed, rapacity, heartlessness, and irresponsibility there is nothing to match a nation.

    Lewis Thomas (1990). “A Long Line of Cells Collected Essays”
  • At this early stage in our evolution, now through our infancy and into our childhood and then, with luck, our growing up, what our species needs most of all, right now, is simply a future.

    Lewis Thomas (1984). “Late Night Thoughts on Listening to Mahler's Ninth Symphony”, Bantam
  • If an idea cannot move on its own, pushing it doesn't help; best to let it lie there.

    Lewis Thomas (1990). “A Long Line of Cells Collected Essays”
  • The central task of science is to arrive, stage by stage, at a clearer comprehension of nature, but this does not at all mean, as it is sometimes claimed to mean, a search for mastery over nature.

    Lewis Thomas (1990). “A Long Line of Cells Collected Essays”
  • It is in our collective behavior that we are most mysterious.

    Lewis Thomas (1990). “A Long Line of Cells Collected Essays”
  • If you want to use a cliche you must take full responsibility for it yourself and not try to fob it off on anon., or on society.

    Lewis Thomas (1990). “A Long Line of Cells Collected Essays”
  • We are at our human finest, dancing with our minds, when there are more choices than two. Sometimes there are ten, even twenty different ways to go, all but one bound to be wrong, and the richness of the selection in such situations can lift us onto totally new ground.

    Lewis Thomas (1990). “A Long Line of Cells Collected Essays”
  • We spend our time sending messages to each other, talking and trying to listen at the same time, exchanging information. This seems to be our most urgent biological function; it is what we do with our lives.

    Lewis Thomas (1990). “A Long Line of Cells Collected Essays”
  • Perhaps the safest thing to do at the outset, if technology permits, is to send music. This language may be the best we have for explaining what we are like to others in space, with least ambiguity. I would vote for Bach, all of Bach, streamed out into space, over and over again. We would be bragging of course, but it is surely excusable to put the best possible face on at the beginning of such an acquaintance. We can tell the harder truths later.

    Lewis Thomas (1990). “A Long Line of Cells Collected Essays”
  • It is my belief, based partly on personal experience but partly also arrived at by looking around at others, that childhood lasts considerably longer in the males of our species than in the females.

    "The Youngest Science: Notes of a Medicine Watcher" by Lewis Thomas, (p. 236), 1983.
  • It's just plain learning something that you didn't know. There is a real aesthetic experience in being dumbfounded.

  • There's really no such thing as the agony of dying. I'm quite sure that pain is shut off at the moment of death. You see, something happens when the body knows it's about to go. Peptide hormones are released by cells in the hypothalamus and pituitary gland. Endorphins. They attach themselves to the cells responsible for feeling pain.

  • It is when physicians are bogged down by their incomplete technologies, by the innumerable things they are obliged to do in medicine when they lack a clear understanding of disease mechanisms, that the deficiencies of the health-care system are most conspicuous. If I were a policy-maker, interested in saving money for health care over the long haul, I would regard it as an act of high prudence to give high priority to a lot more basic research in biologic science.

    Lewis Thomas (1990). “A Long Line of Cells Collected Essays”
  • If we are to be destroyed we will do it ourselves by warfare with thermonuclear weaponry.

  • Most of the time I've worked in labs if I didn't encounter something in a week entirely unexpected and surprising I'd consider it a lost week. Lots of that is due to mistakes and stupidity, but it could open a new line of inquiry. Something really good turns up once in a hundred times, but it makes the whole day worthwhile.

  • Science is founded on uncertainty. Each time we learn something new and surprising, the astonishment comes with the realization that we were wrong before.

  • We are spectacular splendid manifestations of life. We have language. We have affection. And finally, and perhaps best of all, we have music.

  • We live in a dancing matrix of viruses; they dart, rather like bees, from organism to organism, from plant to insect to mammal to me and back again, and into the sea, tugging along pieces of this genome, strings of genes from that, transplanting grafts of DNA, passing around heredity as though at a great party.

    Lewis Thomas (1990). “A Long Line of Cells Collected Essays”
  • I am entitled to say, if I like, that awareness exists in all the individual creatures on the planet-worms, sea urchins, gnats, whales, subhuman primates, superprimate humans, the lot. I can say this because we do not know what we are talking about: consciousness is so much a total mystery for our own species that we cannot begin to guess about its existence in others.

    Lewis Thomas (1990). “A Long Line of Cells Collected Essays”
  • I maintain, despite the moment's evidence against the claim, that we are born and grow up with a fondness for each other, and we have genes for that. We can be talked out of it, for the genetic message is like a distant music, and some of us are hard-of-hearing. Societies are noisy affairs, drowning out the sound of ourselves and our connection.

    Lewis Thomas (1984). “Late Night Thoughts on Listening to Mahler's Ninth Symphony”, Bantam
  • Mistakes are at the very base of human thought, embedded there, feeding the structure like root nodules. If we were not provided with the knack for being wrong, we could never get anything useful done. We think our way along by choosing between right and wrong alternatives, and the wrong choices have to be made as often as the right ones. We get along in life this way.

    Life  
    Lewis Thomas (1990). “A Long Line of Cells Collected Essays”
  • I cannot think of a single field in biology or medicine in which we can claim genuine understanding, and it seems to me the more we learn about living creatures, especially ourselves, the stranger life becomes.

    Life  
  • We pass the word around; we ponder how the case is put by different people, we read the poetry; we meditate over the literature; we play the music; we change our minds; we reach an understanding. Society evolves this way, not by shouting each other down, but by the unique capacity of unique, individual human beings to comprehend each other.

    Lewis Thomas (1990). “A Long Line of Cells Collected Essays”
  • It is almost always a greater pleasure to come across a semicolon than a period. The period tells you that that is that; if you didn't get all the meaning you wanted or expected, anyway you got all the writer intended to parcel out and now you have to move along. But with a semicolon there you get a pleasant little feeling of expectancy; there is more to come; read on; it will get clearer.

    Lewis Thomas (1990). “A Long Line of Cells Collected Essays”
  • It is not so bad being ignorant if you are totally ignorant; the hard thing is knowing in some detail the reality of ignorance.

    Lewis Thomas (1990). “A Long Line of Cells Collected Essays”
  • Survival, in the cool economics of biology, means simply the persistence of one's own genes in the generations to follow.

    Lewis Thomas (1984). “Late Night Thoughts on Listening to Mahler's Ninth Symphony”, Bantam
  • We do not understand much of anything, from... the "big bang" , all the way down to the particles in the atoms of a bacterial cell. We have a wilderness of mystery to make our way through in the centuries ahead.

  • We are, perhaps, uniquely among the earth's creatures, the worrying animal. We worry away our lives, fearing the future, discontent with the present, unable to take in the idea of dying, unable to sit still.

    Life  
    Lewis Thomas (1990). “A Long Line of Cells Collected Essays”
  • A lot of people fear death because they think that so overwhelming an experience has to be painful, but I've seen quite a few deaths, and, with one exception, I've never known anyone to undergo anything like agony. That's amazing when you think about it. I mean, how complicated the mechanism is that's being taken apart.

  • The body of science is not, as it is sometimes thought, a huge coherent mass of facts, neatly arranged in sequence, each one attached to the next by a logical string. In truth, whenever we discover a new fact it involves the elimination of old ones. We are always, as it turns out, fundamentally in error.

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