Usually, the most difficult thing to do is photo-real stuff. Something that has to actually look like the real world, because it's just so difficult to do that. We're just so used to looking at the real world, our brains instantly see when something is not quite right.
The Inventor Of Google Glass Says It Could Outsource Our Brains
Brains without competitive hearts are rudderless.
"It must be inconvenient to be made of flesh," said the Scarecrow thoughtfully, "for you must sleep, and eat and drink. However, you have brains, and it is worth a lot of bother to be able to think properly. "
We categorize as we do because we have the brains and bodies we have and because we interact in the world as we do.
I shall ask for brains instead of a heart; for a fool would not know what to do with a heart if he had one.
We approach the divine by enlarging our souls and lighting up our brains.
Sometimes you see beautiful people with no brains. Sometimes you have ugly people who are intelligent, like scientists.
I have very poor and unhappy brains for drinking.
The best brains of the nation may be found on the last benches of the classroom.
If at age 20 you are not a Communist then you have no heart. If at age 30 you are not a Capitalist then you have no brains.
Your brain gets too comfortable in your everyday surroundings. You need to make it uncomfortable. You need to spend some time in another land, among people that do things differently than you. Travel makes the world look new, and when the world looks new, our brains work harder.
I think there's something in collaboration - the fact that you can sit there and bounce ideas off of someone. It definitely matters who the person is, because certain people. . . The act of collaboration, where you can talk to someone, hang out, get ideas going, there is something in that. That's similar between everyone. But I think every individual collaborator is different, because they have different brains and emotions and ways of working, so it changes. Definitely.
Great books, like large skulls, have often the least brains.
There is no substitute for character. You can buy brains but you cannot buy character.
We have developed a culture in which we eat with our taste buds, not our brains.
What is Camille Paglia doing, writing that an actress as gifted as Anne Heche has the mental depth of a pancake? How many pancake brains could do what Heche did with David Mamet's dialogue in Wag the Dog? No doubt Heche has been stuck with a few bad gigs, but Paglia, of all people, must be well aware that being an actress is not the same safe ride as being the tenured university professor of humanities and media studies at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia.
The status quo and the media is doing everything it can to fry children's brains and make them grow up maladjusted.
Do you have a brain? Then you can think your way out of it. The reason we have brains is so we can figure out how to do things.
Brains are far more important than money or connections. Everyone and anyone can create a business out of their bedroom.