Frank Herbert

Frank Herbert was an American science-fiction writer, most famous for his Dune novels.
See also: Dune (the series of novels), Dune (film), and Dune (TV miniseries).

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Dune (1965)

These are just a couple sample quotes, for more quotes from this novel see Dune

  • I must not fear. Fear is the mind-killer. Fear is the little-death that brings total obliteration. I will face my fear. I will permit it to pass over me and through me. And when it has gone past I will turn the inner eye to see its path. Where the fear has gone there will be nothing. Only I will remain.
    • Bene Gesserit Litany Against Fear

  • Muad'Dib learned rapidly because his first training was in how to learn. And the first lesson of all was the basic trust that he could learn. It's shocking to find how many people do not believe they can learn, and how many more believe learning to be difficult. Muad'Dib knew that every experience carries its lesson.
    • Princess Irulan in The Humanity of Muad'Dib

The Green Brain (1966)

  • Without coming fully awake, Rhin felt his presence beside her, experienced a primitive demand for his protective masculinity. She nestled against him, murmured, "its so hot. Doesn’t it ever cool off?"

  • "I only believe in certain kinds of hell," she said, and again she was looking at him, the green eyes steady.
    "To each his own, eh?"
    "You said it; I didn’t."

  • It wasn’t the kind of answer he'd expected — too subtly penetrating and leaving too much uncommitted. He reminded himself that it was difficult to control uncommitted people. Once a man had invested his energies, he could be twisted and turned at will... but if the man held back, conserved those energies...

  • A person cries out against life because it's lonely, and because life's broken off from whatever created it. But no matter how much you hate life, you love it, too. It's like a caldron boiling with everything you have to have — but very painful to the lips.

  • Is it possible this triviality is a code of some sort? the Brain wondered. But how could it be ... unless there's more to these emotional inconsequentials and this talk of a God than appears on the surface?
    The Brain had begun its career in logics as a pragmatic atheist. Now doubts began to creep into its computations, and it classified doubt as an emotion.

  • "A slave is one who must produce wealth for another," the Brain said. "There is only one true wealth in all the universe. I have given you some of it. I have given your father and your mate some of it. And your friends. This wealth is living time. Time. Are we slaves because we have given you more time to live?"

The Godmakers (1972)

A novel expanding four short stories, first published in serial form between May 1958 and February 1960
  • When a wise man does not understand, he says: "I do not understand." The fool and the uncultured are ashamed of their ignorance. They remain silent when a question could bring them wisdom.

Dune Genesis (1980)


"Dune Genesis", an essay in Omni, Vol. 2, No. 2 (July 1980), p. 72
  • Don't give over all of your critical faculties to people in power, no matter how admirable those people may appear to be. Beneath the hero's facade you will find a human being who makes human mistakes. Enormous problems arise when human mistakes are made on the grand scale available to a superhero. And sometimes you run into another problem.
    It is demonstrable that power structures tend to attract people who want power for the sake of power and that a significant proportion of such people are imbalanced — in a word, insane. … Heroes are painful, superheroes are a catastrophe. The mistakes of superheroes involve too many of us in disaster.
    It is the systems themselves that I see as dangerous.

  • No matter how finely you subdivide time and space, each tiny division contains infinity.
    But this could imply that you can cut across linear time, open it like a ripe fruit, and see consequential connections. You could be prescient, predict accurately. Predestination and paradox once more.
    The flaw must lie in our methods of description, in languages, in social networks of meaning, in moral structures, and in philosophies and religions — all of which convey implicit limits where no limits exist. Paul Muad'Dib, after all, says this time after time throughout Dune.

  • Do you want an absolute prediction? Then you want only today, and you reject tomorrow. You are the ultimate conservative. You are trying to hold back movement in an infinitely changing universe. The verb to be does make idiots of us all.

  • In the beginning I was just as ready as anyone to fall into step, to seek out the guilty and to punish the sinners, even to become a leader. Nothing, I felt, would give me more gratification than riding the steed of yellow journalism into crusade, doing the book that would right the old wrongs.
    Reevaluation raised haunting questions.I now believe that evolution, or deevolution, never ends short of death, that no society has ever achieved an absolute pinnacle, that all humans are not created equal. In fact, I believe attempts to create some abstract equalization create a morass of injustices that rebound on the equalizers. Equal justice and equal opportunity are ideals we should seek, but we should recognize that humans administer the ideals and that humans do not have equal ability.

  • Reevaluation taught me caution. I approached the problem with trepidation. Certainly, by the loosest of our standards there were plenty of visible targets, a plethora of blind fanaticism and guilty opportunism at which to aim painful barbs.
    But how did we get this way? What makes a Nixon? What part do the meek play in creating the powerful? If a leader cannot admit mistakes, these mistakes will be hidden. Who says our leaders must be perfect? Where do they learn this?

  • The scarce water of Dune is an exact analog of oil scarcity. CHOAM is OPEC.

Whipping Star (1969)

  • Where is the weapon with which I enforce your bondage? You give it to me every time you open your mouth.
    • "Laclac Riddle"; p. 68

  • You can say things which cannot be done. This is elementary. The trick is to keep attention focused on what is said and not on what can be done.
    • "BuSab [Bureau of Sabotage] Manual"; p. 87

  • Learning a language represents training in the delusions of that language.
    • "Gowachin Aphorism"; p. 111

  • Providence and Manifest Destiny are synonyms often invoked to support arguments based on wishful thinking.
    • "From The Wreave Commentary"; p. 136

The Dosadi Experiment (1977)

  • That is one of the Law's purposes, of course: to test the qualities of those who choose to employ it.
    • Gowachin Aritch to Jorj X. McKie; p. 68

  • Does a population have informed consent when a ruling minority acts in secret to ignite a war, doing this to justify the existence of the minority's forces? […] failure to provide full information for informed consent on such an issue represents an ultimate crime.
    • "From The Trial of Trials", p. 246

  • Does a population have informed consent when that population is not taught the inner workings of its monetary system, and then is drawn, all unknowing, into economic adventures?
    • "From The Trial of Trials", p. 252

  • Governments always commit their entire populations when the demands grow heavy enough. By their passive acceptance, these populations become accessories to whatever is done in their name.
    • Gowachin Mrreg to Jorj X. McKie; p. 297

See also

  • Dune (all the Dune chronicles)
  • Dune (movie) (1984)
  • Dune (TV miniseries)
 
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