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Matt Ridley Quotes

English journalist, Birth: 7-2-1958 Matt Ridley Quotes
1.
Because it is a monopoly, government brings inefficiency and stagnation to most things it runs; government agencies pursue the inflation of their budgets rather than the service of their customers; pressure groups form an unholy alliance with agencies to extract more money from taxpayers for their members. Yet despite all this, most clever people still call for government to run more things and assume that if it did so, it would somehow be more perfect, more selfless, next time.
Matt Ridley

2.
You need to understand how human beings bring together their brains and enable their ideas to combine and recombine, to meet and, indeed, to mate. In other words, you need to understand how ideas have sex.
Matt Ridley

3.
This idea holds out hope that the human race will prosper mightily in the years ahead-because ideas are having sex with each other as never before.
Matt Ridley

4.
Futurology always ends up telling you more about your own time than about the future.
Matt Ridley

5.
Note even Jonathan Swift would dare to write a satire in which politicians argued that - in a world where species are vanishing and more than a billion people are barely able to afford to eat - it would somehow be good for the planet to clear rain-forests to grow palm oil, or give up food-crop land to grow biofuels, solely so that people could burn fuel derived from carbohydrate rather than hydrocarbons in their cars, thus driving up the price of food for the poor. Ludicrous is too weak a word for this heinous crime.
Matt Ridley

Similar Authors: Cassandra Clare Terry Pratchett Winston Churchill Chuck Palahniuk H. L. Mencken Dave Barry John Steinbeck P. J. O'Rourke Daniel Handler Jeanette Winterson Michael Jackson Benjamin Disraeli Hunter S. Thompson Mitch Albom Frank Herbert
6.
Society works not because we have consciously invented it, but because it is an ancient product of our evolved predispositions. It is literally in our nature.
Matt Ridley

7.
The interaction of genetic and external influences makes my behaviour unpredictable, but not undetermined. In the gap between those words lies freedom.
Matt Ridley

8.
The fuel on which science runs is ignorance. Science is like a hungry furnace that must be fed logs from the forests of ignorance that surround us. In the process, the clearing we call knowledge expands, but the more it expands, the longer its perimeter and the more ignorance comes into view.
Matt Ridley

Quote Topics by Matt Ridley: Running Lying Sex Years Evolution Race Four Ignorance Writing Body Heart Way Book Brain Events Commodity Vehicle Forever Gaps Imitation Nostalgic Mexican Depressing Pressure Groups Ends Collectives Complicated Country Real Selfish
9.
It is not a zero sum game. The simple idea of the gains from trade lies at the heart of the modern and the ancient economy, not the power of capital. There is nothing else to it.
Matt Ridley

10.
Intelligence will become more and more collective; innovation and order will become more and more bottom-up.
Matt Ridley

11.
Prosperity has brought complications. Our lives are busier, faster, more stressful. They're nostalgic for a simpler, slower time.
Matt Ridley

12.
The message from history is so blatantly obvious - that free trade causes mutual prosperity while protectionism causes poverty - that it seems incredible that anybody ever thinks otherwise. There is not a single example of a country opening its borders to trade and ending up poorer.
Matt Ridley

13.
A true scientist is bored by knowledge; it is the assault on ignorance that motivates him - the mysteries that previous discoveries have revealed.
Matt Ridley

14.
The genome is a book that wrote itself, continually adding, deleting and amending over four billion years.
Matt Ridley

15.
In a massive, long-term study of 17,000 civil servants, an almost unbelievable conclusion emerged: the status of a person's job was more likely to predict their likelihood of a heart attack than obesity, smoking or high blood pressure.
Matt Ridley

16.
Ocean acidification looks suspiciously like a back-up plan by the environmental pressure groups in case the climate fails to warm: another try at condemning fossil fuels. [...] Even if the world warms as much as the consensus expects, the net harm still looks small alongside the real harm now being done by preventable causes; and if it does warm this much, it will be because more people are rich enough to afford to do something about it.
Matt Ridley

17.
Our minds have been built by selfish genes, but they have been built to be social, trustworthy and cooperative.
Matt Ridley

18.
Trade is 10 times as old as farming.
Matt Ridley

19.
At some point, human intelligence became collective and cumulative in a way that happened to no other animal.
Matt Ridley

20.
The body is merely an evolutionary vehicle for the gene
Matt Ridley

21.
A cumulative change of less than 2°C by the end of this century will do no net harm. It will actually do net good [...] rainfall will increase slightly, growing seasons will lengthen, Greenland's ice cap will melt only very slowly, and so on.
Matt Ridley

22.
The average Mexican lives longer now than the average Briton did in 1955. Infant mortality is lower today in Nepal than it was in Italy in 1951. The proportion of Vietnamese living on less than $2 a day has dropped from 90 per cent to 30 per cent in twenty years. The rich have got richer, but the poor have done even better.
Matt Ridley

23.
Ecology, like genetics, is not about equilibrium states. It is about change, change and change. Nothing stays the same forever.
Matt Ridley

24.
Every minute, every second, the pattern of genes being expressed in your brain changes, often in direct or indirect response to events outside the body. Genes are the mechanisms of experience.
Matt Ridley

25.
Life is a Sisyphean race, run ever faster toward a finish line that is merely the start of the next race
Matt Ridley

26.
It is the assumption of this book that there is a typical human nature. It is the aim of this book to seek it. Just like a surgeon, a psychiatrist can make all sorts of basic assumptions when a patient lies down upon the couch. He can assume that the patient knows what it means to love, to envy, to trust, to think, to speak, to fear, to smile, to bargain, to covet, to dream, to remember, to sing, to quarrel, to lie. The 'smile' of a baboon is a threat; the smile of a man is a sign of pleasure: it is human nature, the world over.
Matt Ridley

27.
The evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins in 1976 coined the term ‘meme’ for a unit of cultural imitation.
Matt Ridley

28.
How much more generous it would be if, instead of writing parables about childhood wounds, psychologists were to accept that some differences between the sexes just are, that they are in the nature of the beasts, because each sex has an evolved tendency to develop that way in response to experience.
Matt Ridley

29.
Uniqueness is the commodity of glut.
Matt Ridley

30.
Genes are biochemical recipes written in a four-letter alphabet called DNA.
Matt Ridley

31.
Considering the way evolution works, it should not be surprising if every man has got a Don Giovanni somewhere inside him.
Matt Ridley

32.
We consciously decide whether to consider people; we fall in love despite ourselves; we entirely fail to fall in love with people who fall in love with us. It is a mightily complicated business.
Matt Ridley

33.
Simple determinism, whether of the genetic or environmental kind, is a depressing prospect for those with a fondness for free will.
Matt Ridley