Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
![Pierre Teilhard de Chardin](/assets/img/authors/pierre-teilhard-de-chardin.jpg)
Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
Pierre Teilhard de Chardin SJ); 1 May 1881 – 10 April 1955) was a French idealist philosopher and Jesuit priest who trained as a paleontologist and geologist and took part in the discovery of Peking Man. He conceived the idea of the Omega Pointand developed Vladimir Vernadsky's concept of noosphere...
NationalityFrench
ProfessionPhilosopher
Date of Birth1 May 1881
CountryFrance
asking-why people different
In the final analysis, the questions of why bad things happen to good people transmutes itself into some very different questions, no longer asking why something happened, but asking how we will respond, what we intend to do now that it happened.
boredom disrespect world
The world, this palpable world, which we were wont to treat with the boredom and disrespect with which we habitually regard places with no sacred association for us, is in truth a holy place, and we did not know it. Venite, adoremus.
isolation blind alleys
Isolation is a blind alley....Nothing on the planet grows except by convergence.
psychics long depth
My starting point is the fundamental initial fact that each one of us is perforce linked by all the material organic and psychic strands of his being to all that surrounds him. . . . If we look far enough back in the depths of time, the disordered anthill of living beings suddenly, for an informed observer, arranges itself in long files that make their way by various paths towards greater consciousness.
empowering partners possession
The most empowering relationships are those in which each partner lifts the other to a higher possession of their own being.
ascent
Everything that rises must converge.
virtue creation incarnation
By virtue of Creation, and still more the Incarnation, nothing here below is profane for those who know how to see.
joints products knows
The universe as we know it is a joint product of the observer and the observed.
unity splits matter
The more we split and pulverise matter artificially, the more insistently it proclaims its fundamental unity.
romantic world may
Driven by the forces of love, the fragments of the world seek each other so that the world may come to being.