"If elephants didn't exist, you couldn't invent one. They belong to a small group of living things so unlikely they challenge credulity and common sense."
Lyall Watson
Author, Naturalist
Lyall Watson was a South African biologist and author known for his influential work 'Supernature', which explores the connections between nature and consciousness.
- Born
- January 15, 1939
- Quotes
- 11
- Rank
- #3513
About Lyall Watson
Lyall Watson — Life and Legacy
Lyall Watson was a prominent South African biologist, author, and environmentalist, best known for his groundbreaking book 'Supernature'. This work delves into the intricate relationships between life forms and the universe, positing that consciousness is a fundamental aspect of existence. Watson's core thinking revolved around the idea that nature is not merely a backdrop for human activity but a living entity with which we share a profound connection. His assertion that 'the universe is alive' challenges conventional scientific views, suggesting that all elements of the cosmos are interlinked and possess a form of awareness. This perspective invites readers to reconsider their relationship with the natural world, emphasizing the importance of recognizing the interconnectedness of all life. Watson's insights remain relevant today, encouraging a deeper appreciation for the environment and our place within it.
Quote collection
Lyall Watson quotes
11 quotes — follow a thought to its full quote page.
"If the brain were so simple we could understand it, we would be so simple we couldn't."
"Dancing is surely the most basic and relevant of all forms of expression. Nothing else can so effectively give outward form to an inner experience. Poetry and music exist in time. Painting and architecture are a part of space. But only the dance lives at once in both space and time. In it the creator and the thing created, the artist and the expression, are one. Each participates completely in the other. There could be no better metaphor for an understanding of the mechanics of the cosmos."
"It is a fascinating and provocative thought that a body of water deserves to be considered as an organism in its own right."
"Both dance and dream are brought into being by the consciousness of a moment. They can never be repeated or successfully imitated. But you can dance and dream again. You must, if life is to continue."
"We try to abolish intervals by our manic insistence on keeping busy, on doing something. And as a result, all we succeed in doing is destroying all hope of tranquility. ... . You have to learn to immerse yourself in the silences between."
"Genes which allow females to be less inhibited leave fewer copies of themselves than genes which persuade them to remain highly selective. Among males, the best strategy is exactly the opposite one. The maximum advantage goes to those males with the fewest inhibitions. "Love 'em and leave 'em" is not so much a nasty peice of male chauvinist piggery as an accurate reflection of biological reality."
"If you simply walk on the beach as we are doing, you have no special color. But if you travel with a purpose, it is different. When you go somewhere important or you return home from a long journey, you build a shape around you and it reaches out ahead to touch your destination."
"The limits of sensory evolution in fish are defined very largely by their habitat. Water is physically supportive, carries some kinds of odour well, and is kind to sound - letting it travel several times faster than air will allow, but it inhibits other more personal kinds of communication."
"I live and work alone and travel light, relying largely on my memory and making a point of letting # intuition guide my way."
"Before sight and sound hijacked our attention, we shared with all life a sort of common sense, a chemical sense that depended on direct contact with matter in the water or the air."