Famous Quotes & Sayings

Heidgger Quotes & Sayings

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Top Heidgger Quotes

Heidgger Quotes By Rita Williams-Garcia

Cecile made it sound like it was no big deal. "I've been fighting for freedom all my life." But she wasn't talking about protest signs, standing up to the Man, and knowing your rights. She was talking about her life. Just her. Not the people. — Rita Williams-Garcia

Heidgger Quotes By Fulton J. Sheen

Advertising tries to stimulate our sensuous desires, converting luxuries into necessities, but it only intensifies man's inner misery. The business world is bent on creating hungers which its wares never satisfy, and thus it adds to the frustrations and broken minds of our times. — Fulton J. Sheen

Heidgger Quotes By David Friedman

I write and direct the Duke University Children's Hospital Benefit every year. — David Friedman

Heidgger Quotes By Evelyn Glennie

A lot of things which come with a high profile will always be criticised one way or another. — Evelyn Glennie

Heidgger Quotes By Gene Fowler

If they haven't heard it before it's original. — Gene Fowler

Heidgger Quotes By Kimberly Derting

C'mon, lets get out of here. It's too dark. Besides, its more fun if I can see you while you're bitching me out. — Kimberly Derting

Heidgger Quotes By Jane Austen

For shame, Emma! Do not mimic her. You divert me against my conscience. — Jane Austen

Heidgger Quotes By Jojo Moyes

I always imagined a writer was someone who lived in an attic in Paris, but my mum instilled in me a belief that I could do anything - so I ended up writing my first novel while working nights as a news reporter. — Jojo Moyes

Heidgger Quotes By Rachel Sklar

The road system that we've come to depend on, the road system that we built our wealth on and our power on, is falling apart. — Rachel Sklar

Heidgger Quotes By Roger Scruton

Had Heidegger attached his great ego to the cause of international socialism, he would have enjoyed the whitewash granted to Sartre, Merleau-Ponty, Hobsbawm and the other apologists for the Gulag.1 But the cause of national socialism could enjoy no such convenient excuse, and the sin was compounded, in Heidegger's case, by the fact that it was precisely the national, rather than the socialist aspect of the creed that had attracted him. — Roger Scruton