One life – a little gleam of Time between two Eternities.
– Thomas Carlyle
My Homepage
My homepage is at http://coturnix.org. It is temporarily stripped to minimal information, but more will come soon.Grab my RSS feed:
-
Join 1,499 other subscribers
Search This Blog:
Archives
Categories
Recent Comments:
Bora Zivkovic on Morning at Triton Angie Lindsay Ma on Morning at Triton Linda chamblee on Morning at Triton Jekyll » Blog… on The Big Announcement, this tim… Mike H on The Big Announcement, this tim… -
Recent Posts
Top Posts
- Friday Weird Sex Blogging - Corkscrewing
- BIO101 - From Two Cells To Many: Cell Differentiation and Embryonic Development
- Postscript to Pittendrigh's Pet Project - Phototaxis, Photoperiodism and Precise Projectile Parabolas of Pilobolus on Pasture Poop
- The Mighty Ant-Lion
- The Open Laboratory 2008 - all the submissions fit to print
- Lightning Hands (video)
- ScienceOnline2010 – interview with Steve Koch
- Obligatory Readings of the Day
- Waking Experience Affects Sleep Need in Drosophila
- Maps of Old Belgrade
@BoraZ on Twitter:
Tweets by BoraZCC licence

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.PayPal

Sitemeter






This quote is vague about afterlife or the existence of a “soul” in any form outside of the years when we are alive.
It is also analagous to the frequently quoted saying of Rabbi Nachman of Bratslav: “All the world is a narrow bridge. But the essential principle is to fear nothing at all.”.
Both tell us life is the precious blip in an otherwise blank infinity of time, it is to be lived fully. As long as you are not specific about what distiguishes the moments of life from the vastly greater moments without it, you can find the idea in most relgions. One Christian Science author called it “A parenthesis in eternity”, the Persians put it in a folk expression “the world is two days: today and yesterday”. and so on.
The “wise saw” is definitely a two edged sword: a worthy aphorism can be adapted by each who hears it to fit and benefit their particular conception of life.
[Did you expect much response to this post, Bora?]
I am always surprised when someone posts a comment on one of the ClockQuotes posts! But those are usually good and useful!