Top 12 Quotes & Sayings by Paul Shepard

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American author Paul Shepard.
Last updated on December 22, 2024.
Paul Shepard

Paul Howe Shepard, Jr. was an American environmentalist and author best known for introducing the "Pleistocene paradigm" to deep ecology. His works established a normative framework in terms of evolutionary theory and developmental psychology. He offered a critique of sedentism/civilization and advocates modeling human lifestyles on those of nomadic prehistoric humans. He explored the connections between domestication, language, and cognition.

All around us, aspects of the modern world - diet, exercise, medicine, art, work, family, philosophy, economics, ecology, psychology - have begun a long circle back toward their former coherence. Whether they can arrive before the natural world is damaged beyond repair and madness destroys humanity, we cannot tell.
The natural world is not only a set of constraints but of contexts within which we can more fully realize our dreams.
The desert sky is encircling, majestic, terrible. — © Paul Shepard
The desert sky is encircling, majestic, terrible.
Men are born human. What they must learn is to be an animal. If they learn otherwise it may kill them, and kill life on the planet.
Careless of waste, wallowing in refuse, exterminating the enemies . . . despising age, denying human natural history, fabricating pseudotraditions, swamped in the repeated personal crises of the aging preadolescent; all are familiar images of American society. They are signs of private nightmares of incoherence and disorder in broken climaxes where technologies in pursuit of mastery create ever-worsening problems - private nightmares expanded to a social level.
Men ran after and ate horses for four hundred thousand years. The outcome is more than a love of horse flesh; it is a runner's body.
Who would want to live in a world that is just not quite fatal?
To the desert go profits and hermits, through deserts go pilgrims and exiles. Here the leaders of the great religions have sought the therapeutic and spiritual values of retreat, not to escape but to find reality.
There is a secret person undamaged in every individual.
The human cardiovascular system evolved as part of the physiology of [prehistoric] hunters, who ran for their lives.
Man is a distance runner as a consequence of hundreds of thousands of years of chasing antelopes, horses, elephants, wild cattle, and deer.
When men do not run they are likely to die prematurely from dysfunction of the heart and vascular systems or from disabling chronic disease.
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