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Techno Quotes

Quotes tagged as "techno" Showing 1-14 of 14
A.R. Merrydew
“Pythagoras has had me going round in circles for years.�
� Anthony Merrydew”
A.R. Merrydew

A.R. Merrydew
“The demise of the human race rests mainly on the shoulders of stupidity, and the abuse of power in the hands of those we have elected.”
A.R. Merrydew

A.R. Merrydew
“I had a close encounter with an alien last week. He returned to visit us and was amazed we were still here.”
A.R. Merrydew

A.R. Merrydew
“Science Fiction, is the last great escape.”
A.R. Merrydew

“You have to feel the mix and you have to feel the work and the sweet somehow which somebody is investing in that moment in the way that you can really feel the passion.”
Tobias Thomas

Guy Morris
“We both know the world overflows with secrets, most of them kept by bad people trying to do bad things. Those secrets are choking truth, democracy, and compassion to death.”
Guy Morris, The Last Ark: Lost Secrets of Qumran

Guy Morris
“If by peace, you mean terrorized to my bones of rotting in jail, then sure, let’s call that peace”
Guy Morris, The Last Ark: Lost Secrets of Qumran

“The passion for techno is older than techno itself. The passion for drums is older than their invention. And a time will come when the reason for both surpasses them.”
Dan Van Casteele

Guy Morris
“To fall from a place of intellectual celebrity to a place where he barely knows how to add to a conversation lays another blow to a once secure, even arrogant, self-esteem.”
Guy Morris, The Last Ark: Lost Secrets of Qumran

“I had a close encounter with an alien last week. He returned to visit us and was amazed we were still here.”
Anthony Merrydew

“The demise of the human race rests mainly on the shoulders of stupidity, and the abuse of power in the hands of those we have elected.”
Anthony Merrydew

“Science Fiction, is the last great escape.”
Anthony Merrydew

“Pythagoras has had me going round in circles for years.”
Anthony Merrydew

Roger Scruton
“Techno-music is the voice of the machine, triumphing over the human utterance and cancelling its pre-eminent claim to our attention. In such music we encounter the background noise of modern life, but suddenly projected into the foreground, so as to fill all the auditory space. However much you listen to this music, you will never hear it as you hear the human voice; not even when it sounds so loudly that you can hear nothing else. You are overhearing the machine, as it discourses in the moral void.”
Roger Scruton, An Intelligent Person's Guide to Modern Culture