R. Buckminster Fuller Quotes About Principles

We have collected for you the TOP of R. Buckminster Fuller's best quotes about Principles! Here are collected all the quotes about Principles starting from the birthday of the Architect – July 12, 1895! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 11 sayings of R. Buckminster Fuller about Principles. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • It seemed that the time would come evolutionarily when humans might have acquired enough knowledge of generalized principles to permit a graduation from class-two (entropically selfish) evolution into class-one (syntropically cooperative) evolution, thereafter making all the right moves for all the right reasons.

    "Critical Path". Book by Buckminster Fuller, p. 246, 1981.
  • The difference between mind and brain is that brain deals only with memorized, subjective, special-case experiences and objective experiments, while mind extracts and employs the generalized principles and integrates and interrelates their effective employment.

    Mind  
    R. Buckminster Fuller (2008). “Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth”, p.107, Estate of R. Buckminster Fuller
  • The word generalization in literature usually means covering too much territory too thinly to be persuasive, let alone convincing. In science, however, a generalization means a principle that has been found to hold true in every special case.... The principle of leverage is a scientific generalization.

    R. Buckminster Fuller (1982). “Synergetics: Explorations in the Geometry of Thinking”, p.26, Estate of R. Buckminster Fuller
  • I'm not trying to copy Nature, I'm trying to find the principles she's using.

  • All of humanity now has the option to "make it" successfully and sustainably, by virtue of our having minds, discovering principles and being able to employ these principles to do more with less.

    Mind  
    R. Buckminster Fuller “Utopia or Oblivion: The Prospects for Humanity”, Estate of R. Buckminster Fuller
  • Truth is cosmically total: synergetic. Verities are generalized principles stated in semimetaphorical terms. Verities are differentiable. But love is omniembracing, omnicoherent, and omni-inclusive, with no exceptions. Love, like synergetics, is nondifferentiable, i.e., is integral.

    R. Buckminster Fuller (1982). “Synergetics: Explorations in the Geometry of Thinking”, p.619, Estate of R. Buckminster Fuller
  • Only our minds are able to discover the generalized principles operating without exception in each and every special-experience case which if detected and mastered will give knowledgeable advantage in all instances.

    Mind  
    R. Buckminster Fuller (2008). “Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth”, p.67, Estate of R. Buckminster Fuller
  • There are no solids. There are no things. There are only interfering and non-interfering patterns operative in pure principle, and principles are eternal.

    R. Buckminster Fuller (1982). “Critical Path”, p.379, Estate of R. Buckminster Fuller
  • So long as mathematicians can impose up-and-down semantics upon students while trafficking personally in the non-up-and-down advantages of their concise statements, they can impose upon the ignorance of man a monopoly of access to accurate processing of information and can fool even themselves by thought habits governing the becoming behavior of professional specialists, by disclaiming the necessity of, or responsibility for, comprehensive adjustment of the a priori thought to total reality of universal principles.

    "Ideas and Integrities: A Spontaneous Autobiographical Disclosure". Book by R. Buckminster Fuller, p. 234, "The Designers and the Politicians" (1962), 1969.
  • With our minds alone we can discover those principles we need to employ to convert all humanity to success in a new, harmonious relationship with the universe.

    Mind  
  • The synergetic integral of the totality of all principles is God, whose sum-total behavior in pure principle is beyond our comprehension and is utterly mysterious to us, because as humans--in pure principle--we do not and never will know all the principles

    R. Buckminster Fuller (1982). “Critical Path”, p.379, Estate of R. Buckminster Fuller
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