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Red Mars Quotes

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Red Mars (Mars Trilogy, #1) Red Mars by Kim Stanley Robinson
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Red Mars Quotes Showing 1-30 of 226
“Beauty is power and elegance, right action, form fitting function, intelligence, and reasonability. And very often expressed in curves.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“Science was many things, Nadia thought, including a weapon with which to hit other scientists.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“We were outside the world, we didn't even own things -- some clothes. . . . This arrangement resembles the prehistoric way to live, and it therefore feels right to us, because our brains recognize it from 3 millions of years practicing it. In essence our brains grew to their current configuration in response to the realities of that life. So as a result people grow powerfully attached to that kind of life, when they get the chance to live it. It allows you to concentrate your attention on the real work, which means everything that is done to stay alive, to make things, or satisfy one's curiosity, or play. That is utopia.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“Very few people ever bother to find out what other people really think. They are willing to accept whatever they are told about anyone sufficiently distant.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“History was like some vast thing that was always over the tight horizon, invisible except in its effects. It was what happened when you weren't looking -- an unknowable infinity of events, which although out of control, controlled everything.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“That's a large part of what economics is - people arbitrarily, or as a matter of taste, assigning numerical values to non-numerical things. And then pretending that they haven't just made the numbers up, which they have. Economics is like astrology in that sense, except that economics serves to justify the current power structure, and so it has a lot of fervent believers among the powerful.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“Historical analogy is the last refuge of people who can't grasp the current situation.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“They were so ignorant! Young men and women, educated very carefully to be apolitical, to be technicians who thought they disliked politics, making them putty in the hands of their rulers, just like always. It was appalling how stupid they were, really, and he could not help lashing into them.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“But lies were what people wanted; that was politics.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“In games there are rules, but in life the rules keep changing.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“It's the love of right lures men to wrong.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“The only part of an argument that really matters is what we think of the people arguing. X claims a, Y claims b. They make arguments to support their claims with any number of points. But when their listeners remember the discussion, what matters is simply that X believes a and Y believes b. People then form their judgment on what they think of X and Y.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“The intense thereness of it-haecceity Sax had called it once, when John had asked him something about his religious beliefs-I believe in haecceity, Sax had said, in thisness, in here-and-nowness, in the particular individuality of every moment. That's why I want to know what is this? what is this? what is this? Now, remembering Sax's odd word and his odd religion, John finally understood him; because he was feeling the thisness of the moment like a rock in his hand, and it felt as if his entire life had been lived only to get him to this moment.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“Money equals power; power makes the law; and law makes government.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“It was a world of acts, and words had no more influence on acts than the sound of a waterfall has on the flow of the stream.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“You just don't have faith!" Frank repeated.
"Well I hope I never get it! It's like being hit by a hammer in the head!”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“Each of us have a gift, you see, given us freely by the universe. And each of us with every breath gives something back”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“And, you know, you never really summon all of your strength until you know that there’s no way back, no way to go but onward.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“People didn’t understand that true intimacy did not consist of sexual intercourse, which could be done with strangers and in a state of total alienation; intimacy consisted of talking for hours about what was most important in one’s life.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“And it came to her that the pleasure and stability of dining rooms had always occurred against such a backdrop, against the catastrophic background of universal chaos; such moments of calm were things as fragile and transitory as soap bubbles, destined to burst almost as soon as they blew into existence. Groups of friends, rooms, streets, years, none of them would last. The illusion of stability was created by a concerted effort to ignore the chaos they were imbedded in. And so they ate, and talked, and enjoyed each other’s company; this was the way it had been in the caves, on the savannah, in the tenements and the trenches and the cities huddling under bombardment.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“I know.â€� She sighed. “We’ll all say that. We’ll all go on and make the place safe. Roads, cities. New sky, new soil. Until it’s all some kind of Siberia or Northwest Territories, and Mars will be gone and we’ll be here, and we’ll wonder why we feel so empty. Why when we look at the land we can never see anything but our own faces.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“Most ignorance is by choice, you know, and so ignorance is very telling about what really matters to people.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“In games there are rules, but in life the rules keep changing. You could put your bishop out there to mate the other guy’s king, and he could lean down and whisper in your bishop’s ear, and suddenly it’s playing for him, and moving like a rook. And you’re fucked.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“When obsessives are given their object of desire, what do they feel? It was hard to say, really. In a sense their lives were ending; yet something else, some other life, had finally, finally begunâ€�. Filled with so many emotions at once, it was impossible not to be confused; it was an interference pattern, some feelings cancelled, others reinforced.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“When Reinhold Messner returned from the first solo climb of Everest, he was severely dehydrated, and utterly exhausted; he fell down most of the last part of the descent, and collapsed on the Rongbuk glacier, and he was crawling over it on hands and knees when the woman who was his entire support team reached him; and he looked up at her out of a delirium, and said, “Where are all my friends?”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“It was a mistake to speak one's mind at any time, unless it perfectly matched your political purpose; and it never did.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“We are the consciousness of the universe, and our job is to spread that around, to go look at things, to live everywhere we can. It’s too dangerous to keep the consciousness of the universe on only one planet, it could be wiped out. And so now we’re on two, three if you count the moon. And we can change this one to make it safer to live on.

Changing it won’t destroy it. Reading its past might get harder, but the beauty of it won’t go away. If there are lakes, or forests, or glaciers, how does that diminish Mars’s beauty? I don’t think it does. I think it only enhances it. It adds life, the most beautiful system of all. But nothing life can do will bring Tharsis down, or fill Marineris. Mars will always remain Mars, different from Earth, colder and wilder. But it can be Mars and ours at the same time. And it will be.

There is this about the human mind: if it can be done, it will be done. We can transform Mars and build it like you would build a cathedral, as a monument to humanity and the universe both. We can do it, so we will do it. So - we might as well start”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“It’s amazing how little you need to keep starving people strung along.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“They lived like monkeys still, while their new god powers lay around them in the weeds.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars
“He pointed to another number, changing as rapidly as the first, but on a lower trajectory; it rose to a high of 8.79 rem per hour. Several lifetimes of dentistsâ€� X-rays, to be sure; but the radiation outside the storm shelter would have been a lethal dose, so they were getting off lightly. Still, the amount flying through the rest of the ship! Billions of particles were penetrating the ship and colliding with the atoms of water and metal they were huddled behind; hundreds of millions were flying between these atoms and then through the atoms of their bodies, touching nothing, as if they were no more than ghosts. Still, thousands were striking atoms of flesh and bone. Most of those collisions were harmless; but in all those thousands, there were in all probability one or two (or three?) in which a chromosome strand was taking a hit, and kinking in the wrong way: and there it was. Tumor initiation, begun with just that typo in the book of the self. And years later, unless the victim's DNA luckily repaired itself, the tumor promotion that was a more or less unavoidable part of living would have its effect, and there would appear a bloom of Something Else inside: cancer. Leukemia, most likely; and, most likely, death.”
Kim Stanley Robinson, Red Mars

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