Annals Of Aman Quotes & Sayings
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Top Annals Of Aman Quotes

I remember thinkin theworld still felt as if it was made of glass, and I had to be damned careful not to slip on it n cut myself when I had to let go ... — Stephen King

I was born with the impression that what happened in books was much for reasonable, and interesting, and real, in some ways, than what happened in life. — Anne Tyler

I drink at least five bottles of water a day and always get eight hours of sleep. — Rebecca Gayheart

There are two ways of looking at the talking filibuster. My way is as a form of unanimous consent. — Jeff Merkley

We both wondered whether these contradictions that one can't avoid if one begins to think of time and space may not really be proofs that the whole of life is a dream, and the moon and stars bits of nightmare. — Arthur Machen

But the rational mind usually doesn't decide what emotions we "should" have ! — Daniel Goleman

Certain type of actresses get younger instead of older. I always say, 'Only ingenues age.' — Elaine Stritch

No science is immune to the infection of politics and the corruption of power. — Jacob Bronowski

A dream you dream alone is only a dream. A dream you dream together is reality. — Yoko Ono

There, sitting cross-legged on the floor, he stared absently at his legs. They began to look strange. They no longer seemed to grow from his trunk at all, but rather, completely unconnected, they sprawled rudely before him. When he got this far, he realized something he had never noticed before - that his legs were unbearably hideous. With hair growing unevenly and blue streaks running rampant, they were terribly strange creatures. — Soseki Natsume

But it may be the hard part of a friend to rebuke a friend's folly. — J.R.R. Tolkien

I try not so much to create new characters and worlds but to create new game-play experiences. — Shigeru Miyamoto

From this failure to expunge the microeconomic foundations of neoclassical economics from post-Great Depression theory arose the "microfoundations of macroeconomics" debate, which ultimately led to a model in which the economy is viewed as a single utility-maximizing individual blessed with perfect knowledge of the future.
Fortunately, behavioral economics provides the beginnings of an alternative vision of how individuals operate in a market environment, while multi-agent modelling and network theory give us foundations for understanding group dynamics in a complex society. These approaches explicitly emphasize what neoclassical economics has evaded: that aggregation of heterogeneous individuals results in emergent properties of the group, which cannot be reduced to the behavior of any "representative individual." These approaches should replace neoclassical microeconomics completely. — Steve Keen