Machines What Quotes
Collection of top 39 famous quotes about Machines What
Machines What Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Machines What quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
We have to make machines understand what they're doing, or they won't be able to come back and say, 'Why did you do that?'
— Nicholas Negroponte
The sewing machine joins what the scissors have cut asunder, plus whatever else comes in its path.
— Mason Cooley
Movie 2001: A Space Odyssey. Off to the side were dozens of keypunch machines - what passed in those days for computer terminals.
— Malcolm Gladwell
The greatest task before civilization at present is to make machines what they ought to be, the slaves, instead of the masters of men.
— Havelock Ellis
What we know oman today is limited precisely by the extent to which we have regarded him as a machine.
— Friedrich Nietzsche
What the gears cannot do the computer might. The computer is the Proteus of machines. Its essence is its universality, its power to simulate
— Seymour Papert
What I'd really like to control is not machines, but people.
— Stephen Hawking
I visualize a time when we will be to robots what dogs are to humans, and I'm rooting for the machines.
— Claude Shannon
As we cannot hangout with a machine and tell what exactly to do, we just hang a few things out of context and say, "doing this would still do"!
— Prakash Hegade
How will machines know what we value if we don't know ourselves?
— John C. Havens
What in Gods name is it worth to be human, if we have to be saved from ourselves by a machine?
— John Brunner
We are trying to build peace by inventing new war machines; if that isn't insanity than what is?
— Debasish Mridha
I never liked the idea of doing what a machine says. I hate having to salute something built in a factory.
— Philip K. Dick
But what first motivated me wasn't anything I read. I just got mad seeing the machines ripping up the woods and so forth ...
— Theodore Kaczynski
The reason I'm painting this way is that I want to be a machine, and I feel that whatever I do and do machine-like is what I want to do.
— Andy Warhol
We have to accept that we are just machines. That's certainly what modern molecular biology says about us.
— Rodney Brooks
An ironic revelation of the television-computer age is that what people want from machines is humanity: stories, contact, and interaction.
— Thomas Lewis
The universe was a vast machine yesterday, it is a hologram today. Who knows what intellectual rattle we'll be shaking tomorrow.
— R.D. Laing
That's what songs are, right? They are little time machines that transport us to a moment that you cannot forget.
— S.M. Bailey
What does the money machine eat? It eats youth, spontaneity, life, beauty, and, above all, it eats creativity. It eats quality and sh*ts quantity.
— William S. Burroughs
What do such machines really do? They increase the number of things we can do without thinking. Things we do without thinking-there's the real danger.
— Frank Herbert
Our history shows that what we must do is assert domination over the machine, to guide it so that it works for the values of our choice.
— Charles A. Reich
(You think you know suffering? What about life before dishwashers? Washing machines? Tampons? Vacuum cleaners? You have no idea. No idea!)
— Magnus Flyte
Previously chewed meals. Cub held up one labeled "Monster Machines," but she shook her head. "That's not really what Preston
— Barbara Kingsolver
Being unique is what's cool. Normal? What's normal? A setting on a washing machine. No one wants to be that.
— Ashley Purdy
What kind of world is this that can send machines to Mars and does nothing to stop the killing of a human being?
— Jose Saramago
Our technology, our machines, is part of our humanity. We created them to extend ourselves, and that is what is unique about human beings.
— Ray Kurzweil
Money is a machine for doing quickly and commodiously what would be done, though less quickly and commodiously, without it.
— John Stuart Mill
What people who don't create don't understand, is that once you take money from the machine, the machine [movie industry] owns you.
— Tucker Max
CLOCK, n. A machine of great moral value to man, allaying his concern for the future by reminding him what a lot of time remains to him.
— Ambrose Bierce