David Walton

Wikimedia disambiguation page

David Walton (born October 26, 1975) is an American science fiction and fantasy writer.

David Walton in 2019.

Quotes edit

The Genius Plague (2017) edit

All page numbers from the trade paperback first edition published by Pyr ISBN 978-1-63388-343-7
  • “All I’m hearing is ‘I can’t’ when I needed that data yesterday. Go bore someone else with your excuses.”
    • Chapter 18 (p. 176)
  • “Having trouble with the help?” I asked.
    “Trying to weed out those who kiss other asses to cover their own,” she said. “There are people who get things done, and people who just get in the way.”
    • Chapter 18 (p. 176)
  • Humans are driven by emotion. Much of our so-called logic is merely the rationalization of choices that make us feel good.
    • Chapter 20 (p. 204)
  • Its purpose is the same as every other organism. To survive.
    • Chapter 21 (p. 210)
  • “If not, we’ll go to plan B.”
    “Which is?”
    “I don’t know. I’ll make it up if we need it.”
    • Chapter 23 (p. 238)
  • The whole earth is solar powered. The movement of clouds and air and water, the growth of plants and animals, it’s all just a big heat engine driven by the sun. Humanity has spent so long binging on fossil fuels that we’ve forgotten where it all comes from.
    • Chapter 29 (p. 312)
  • “When history looks back on this century,” Paul said, “they will see it as an aberration. A bizarre spike on the energy graph when we suddenly realized the Earth had millions of years of the sun’s energy stored underground and used it all up in a brief blaze of glory. The worst thing that ever happened to the human race was the invention of the steam engine.”
    “You’re kidding me,” I said. “All of modern human advancement and invention, enabling billions of people to survive, that’s all nothing? Medicine? Global communication? Modern agriculture?”
    “It’s a glitch. It’s like blowing your whole trust fund in a weekend. When the fund runs out, you’ve got to live on your income.”
    • Chapter 29 (pp. 312-313)
  • Nobody knows: they just believe, and then because everyone else believes it, too, it feels like it couldn’t possibly be wrong. But consensus doesn’t mean truth. In fact, it means a lack of critical thinking, a blind following of the status quo. Humans are really good at doing that, too.
    • Chapter 34 (p. 359)

External links edit

 
Wikipedia