Bioshock Infinite Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 11 famous quotes about Bioshock Infinite with everyone.
Top Bioshock Infinite Quotes

Cash-payment never was, or could except for a few years be, the union-bond of man to man. Cash never yet paid one man fully his deserts to another; nor could it, nor can it, now or henceforth to the end of the world. — Thomas Carlyle

And in a democracy, when we say we're mad at what's going on, what we need to be saying is we're mad at ourselves. — Mike Lowry

I'm not the kind of actor who runs around and insists on being called Stravinsky by everybody, and my family has to call me Igor. I'm not that kind of actor. I think that's pretentious. — Mads Mikkelsen

They say time is money, but that's not true. Time is life. And if I want the fullest life, I need to find fullest time ... the busyness of your life leaving little room for the source of your life ...
God gives us time. And who has time for God?
Which makes no sense. — Ann Voskamp

I was always a filmmaker before I was anything else. If I was always anything, I was a storyteller, and it never really made much of a difference to me what medium I worked in. — Nicholas Meyer

We have a tough schedule this summer, so I have to plan my schedule wisely if I want to be able to last throughout the season. — Kim Clijsters

Or perhaps the syndrome we are witnessing is preemptive capitulation: If we reduce our conscience to rubble before the bad men get here, they will have nothing to destroy. — J. Budziszewski

History is what the evidence compels us to believe. — Michael Joseph Oakeshott

Sins of commission are far more productive of happiness than the sins of omission. — Myrtle Reed

Sometimes people never saw things clearly until it was too late and they no longer had the strength to start again. Or else they forgot their idea along the way and didn't even realize that they had forgotten — Tove Jansson

[M]an's power, and its way of operation, [is] muchwhat the same in the material and intellectual world. For the materials in both being such as he has no power over, either to make or destroy, all that man can do, is either to unite them together, or to set them by one another, or wholly separate them. — John Locke