Dispassionate Objectivity Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 15 famous quotes about Dispassionate Objectivity with everyone.
Top Dispassionate Objectivity Quotes
The specific course you decide upon is, within certain parameters, less important than the vigor with which you execute it. — Jeff Cooper
I don't care what you think unless it is about me. — Kurt Cobain
The power of yes: that's what allows creativity to breathe and to come in. That's what allows your ideas to become living, breathing, moving dreams in action. — Jason Mraz
Dispassionate objectivity is itself a passion, for the real and for the truth. — Abraham H. Maslow
Ideas are not free-floating in consciousness but are grounded in the social world in the most concrete ways. — James Davison Hunter
the more opinions you have, the less you see — Wim Wenders
Truman Capote has made lying an art. A minor art. — Gore Vidal
Worry is useless mulling over of things we cannot change. Worry is not concern, which would motivate you to do everything possible in a situation. — Peace Pilgrim
God, I needed you," he murmured. "I can't even tell you how many times I thought about this. The funny thing is, I don't need you any less now. I think I need you more."
~Shane~ — Rachel Caine
Grace is necessary to salvation, free will equally so - but grace in order to give salvation, free will in order to receive it. — Bernard Of Clairvaux
Miracles and bliss are the norm. — Kelly Corbet
I like the idea of becoming [fairly] good at lots of things rather than very good at just one thing. So it would be nice to be okay at the guitar or at the piano, a reasonable cook, perhaps able to fix your car or do some basic carpentry, and be able to write the odd article. Rather than being super good at one tiny thing, to be kind of average at lots of things. It might mean that you have a more kind of enjoyable, complete life. — Tom Hodgkinson
Evil-doers who denounce the wise resemble a person who spits against the sky; the spittle will never reach the sky, but comes down on himself. Evil-doers again resemble a man who stirs the dust against the wind; the dust is never raised without doing him injury. Thus, the wise will never be hurt, but the curse is sure to destroy the evil-doers themselves. — Gautama Buddha
How can justice be attained when, in the expiation of an old wrong, another wrong is to be committed? No reasonable creature would conceive of the idea of obliterating ink stains with ink, or spots of oil with oil. Only blood must be washed out with blood. — Bertha Von Suttner
The capacity of passion is both cruel and divine — George Sand
