17th Century Dutch Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 12 famous quotes about 17th Century Dutch with everyone.
Top 17th Century Dutch Quotes

Although one of the points of an Integral approach to any problem is to language that issue in a s large a number of levels as possible (Magic, Mythic, Rational, Pluralistic, Integral, and Super-Integral - and this includes the "conveyor belt" of spirituality), this doesn't mean to cavalierly overlook Integral itself. The Integral level is a prerequisite for "Integral We" practices (although anybody can be invited to those practices; but realize that an "Integral" depth of the "We" will not be achieved in any group the majority of whose individuals are not themselves at Integral). — Ken Wilber

That's the trouble with our charities; we are always saving somebody away off, when the fellow next to us ain't eating. — Will Rogers

Thus Hawkes (1975)maintained that pornography is not explicit sex, but 'uncaring sex,' but could add that '[t]o me, censorship is pornographic. — Martha Cornog

When you show a man what he wants he will move heaven and earth to get it. — Frank Bettger

Love is the most important healing power there is. — Louise Hay

A person is very strong... when he seeks to protect something. — Heathcliff

Sometimes we have absolutely no idea where we are, we need the smallest clue to show us where to begin. — Cecelia Ahern

Life can be a real bitch at times and force us to destroy what we created. The important thing is to believe in what we created, to believe in the magic of the moment when we found those people in our lives, keep fighting until life bows down to our wishes and lets them be a part of our existence. — Faraaz Kazi

Design is a process - an intimate collaboration between engineers, designers, and clients. — Henry Dreyfuss

If you hit a kangaroo in the street and you have to pull out on the side of the road, it can get back up and murder you. — Vince Staples

I'm from Holland and the history of "Admiral" is something you would read about when you're at school. Nobody knows about these stories and when you go to any museum in Holland, you will see these paintings of these 17th century sea beckels that the Dutch were in to, so it always intrigued me. — Roel Reine