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. . . . Pre-existing or innate virtues,
talents or gifts are regarded as having been acquired in a previous birth.
Genius is without exception a talent or aptitude brought from another birth.
Friedrich Schleiermacher
Talks on Religion
. . . . A single moment of mankind's history
will return, and from the various cusing leading thereto, you shall
discern lthe course of the universe and the formula of its laws.
A genius . . . will awaken from his slumber, appearing on a new scene .
. .
William Blake
Blake's Humanism
. . . . Eternal Man exists primarily by
those faculties, which nourish his genius and promote his generosity .
. .
Honoré de Balzac
Seraphita
. . . . The endless legacy of the past to
the present is the secret source of human genius . . .
Henry Ford
Interview (April 27 and 28, 1938)
. . . . Genius is experience. Some
seem to think that it is a gift or talent, but it is the fruit of long
experience in many lives . . .
Gustave Geley
From the Unconscious to the Conscious
. . . All the innate capacities are subconscious; likewise the higher faculties --intuition, talents, genius, artistic or creative inspiration. . .
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