Aproximaciones 3 Quotes & Sayings
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Top Aproximaciones 3 Quotes

[A]ll the ingenious men, and all the scientific men, and all the fanciful men, in the world, ... could never invent, if all their wits were boiled into one, anything so curious and so ridiculous as a lobster. — Charles Kingsley

in simple terms, what you perceive as real, is actually a neurological reconstruction or simulation of the actual real thing. It's not as simple as saying, we see as it is. Actually we do not ever see as it is. — Abhijit Naskar

I find N.Y. very inspiring; there is an amazing energy and flow of creativity in N.Y. like nowhere else. — Charlotte Ronson

She sounds like someone who spends a lot of time in libraries, which are the best sorts of people. — Catherynne M Valente

A lot of times, I can put a product together with a distributor when I go into my Rolodex for distributors. I can then put it together with a face, such as an artist. And then I can go into my databank of retailers and people that I've been working with through the years of retail, and then also manufacturing. — Daymond John

It is not who you are underneath but it is what underwear you wear and what you do that defines you — Bruce Wayne

Try to make every moment, the moment of your life. — Munazza Bangash

Decorating is a footnote to real life for me, a means to an end: Living well. — Charlotte Moss

All presidents swear an oath to the Constitution to keep this country united, and when the country fell apart, Lincoln had to put it back together again, with a lot of help. But he bore total responsibility. — Steven Spielberg

Picasso only registers the deformities which have not yet penetrated our consciousness. Art is a mirror which goes 'fast' like a watch - sometimes. — Franz Kafka

Strength is born in the deep silence of long-suffering hearts; not amid joy. — Felicia Hemans

In other words, you're justifying the Hundred Years' War.'
'More or less. For it enabled our two peoples to become deeply interdependent, allowing the most fruitful of intellectual exchanges.'
'You mean, the French are "anglicized" without knowing it.'
'And the English have assimilated their Continental experience from that time much more than you think. But this is what I was leading up to: the Englishman is essentially a mystical being. And, because he's scrupulous, he's apprehensive. And therefore susceptible to everything that might be interpreted as a superhuman manifestation, whether it be a legend of esoteric significance - as in this case - or an event of peculiar resonance. Don't forget, all the official bodies in Paris - parliament, clergy, and especially the university - were in favour of the English at the period I'm talking about.'
'Of course! — Jacques Yonnet