The human imagination can connect to practically anything.

The best way to renew thought is to go outside the human imagination.

Technology, like art, is a soaring exercise of the human imagination.

Nature uses human imagination to lift her work of creation to even higher levels.

Human imagination is so much more potent than anything we could put down in words.

Nature's imagination is so boundless compared to our own meager human imagination.

The realities of the world seldom measure up to the sublime designs of human imagination.

Reality has always been too small for the human imagination. We're always trying to transcend.

The human imagination has already come to conceive the possibility of recreating human society.

There is nothing that human imagination can figure brilliant and enviable that human genius and skill do not aspire to realize.

Fantasy has a dark side to it. It also has a light hemisphere - the power of the human imagination to keep going, to imagine a better tomorrow.

I think technical people now should learn literature, because literature teaches you a great deal about how - the depths and variety of human imagination.

The human imagination... has great difficulty in living strictly within the confines of a materialist practice or philosophy. It dreams, like a dog in its basket, of hares in the open.

The human relationship to combustion is as mysterious as it is fraught with madness. From the candle flame to the nuclear blast, it has lit up the human imagination with fear and fascination.

I have truly been inspired by the struggle and triumphs of so many women that dare to break new ground in all aspects of society, and those who have pushed the boundaries of human imagination.

We are all afraid for our confidence, for the future, for the world. That is the nature of the human imagination. Yet every man, every civilization, has gone forward because of its engagement with what it has set itself to do.

Mars has long exerted a pull on the human imagination. The erratically moving red star in the sky was seen as sinister or violent by the ancients: The Greeks identified it with Ares, the god of war; the Babylonians named it after Nergal, god of the underworld. To the ancient Chinese, it was Ying-huo, the fire planet.

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