Quotes & Sayings About Being A Space Cadet
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Top Being A Space Cadet Quotes

Muichi Motsu: "Hold nothing": If you meet Buddha, kill Buddha. If you meet the patriarchs, kill the patriarchs. Free of all, bound by nothing, you live your life simply as it is — Kazuya Minekura

Incomprehensible jargon is the hallmark of a profession. — Kingman Brewster Jr.

You don't mind? Life is in the minding. — Tom Stoppard

These are the people we elected and if we are not satisfied we should get new candidates. It is in our hands. It is our country. It is a very simplistic view that politicians are to blame for everything. — Robert Stanfield

I stress out a lot. Being a perfectionist doesn't help with that! — Ryan Newman

Change happened and you thought it was forever, and immediately there were all the enemies of that change making common cause and meeting in the cloakrooms. — C.J. Cherryh

When you view yourself through the lens of God's Word, you will better understand God's love for you and the worth you have in His eyes. — Elizabeth George

The seventh element is 'consciousness' that raises a human from the basic corporeal state and takes them to super-consciousness. — Girdhar Joshi

Also, a foreign accent if at least intelligible can sound quite sexy. — C.J. Cherryh

How slowly life moves when you're dead. Another day, another hour, another night in bed. I want to live awake. I've been sleeping. Sleepwalking. — Pearl Abraham

Let us begin with some of the earliest discoveries and correct hypotheses. Anaximander thought that the earth floats freely, and is not supported on anything. Aristotle,2 who often rejected the best hypotheses of his time, objected to the theory of Anaximander, that the earth, being at the centre, remained immovable because there was no reason for moving in one direction rather than another. If this were valid, he said, a man placed at the centre of a circle with food at various points of the circumference would starve to death for lack of reason to choose one portion of food rather than another. This argument reappears in scholastic philosophy, not in connection with astronomy, but with free will. It reappears in the form of 'Buridan's ass', which was unable to choose between two bundles of hay placed at equal distances to right and left, and therefore died of hunger. — Anonymous

There is absolutely no inevitability as long as there is a willingness to contemplate what is happening. — Marshall McLuhan