Alienacion Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 12 famous quotes about Alienacion with everyone.
Top Alienacion Quotes

In general, a fact is worth more than theories in the long run. The theory stimulates, but the fact builds. The former in due time is replaced by one better but the fact remains and becomes fertile. — Theobald Smith

The gap between the rich and poor is growing among and within most nations. The political and social effects of unequal location of energy and other mineral resources are acute. Population numbers continue to climb. The global environment shows signs of widespread deterioration. Both natural and social environments are increasingly vulnerable to catastrophic disturbances ... There may, however, be a cheering challenge in the possibility that out of its struggle with these realities the human race may move a bit nearer to behaving as if it were indeed one family. — Gilbert F. White

It is typical, in America, that a person's hometown is not the place where he is living now but is the place he left behind. — Margaret Mead

There is no way that Christians, in a private capacity, can do so much to promote the work of God and advance the kingdom of Christ as by prayer. — Jonathan Edwards

You are either becoming more like Christ every day or you are becoming less like Him. There is no neutral position in the Lord. — Stormie O'martian

And waking, once again, face smudged into Andrea's couch, the red quilt humped around her shoulders, smelling coffee, while Andrea hummed some Tokyo pop song to herself in the next room, dressing, in a gray morning of Paris rain. — William Gibson

I remember wishing the moment would hold forever; that we could be fixed there, laughing and irredescent... Then I got panicky because I knew it would pass; that it was passing already. — Tina Howe

Things look different when history is seen as His-story. — Peter Kreeft

All animals are sad after coitus except the female human and the rooster. — Galen

If such external influences are intrinsic to religion, then logic and scientific thought dictate that there must be a mechanism by which this influence is transmitted. A religious or spiritual belief that involves an invisible undetectable force that nonetheless influences human actions and behavior or that of the world itself produces a situation in which a believer has no choice but to have faith and abandon logic
or simply not care. — Lisa Randall

The mere possibility provides no warrant for denying what I clearly grasp. — William Lane Craig