Famous Quotes & Sayings

Honoria Murphy Quotes & Sayings

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Top Honoria Murphy Quotes

Honoria Murphy Quotes By Thomas Huxley

Some experience of popular lecturing had convinced me that the necessity of making things plain to uninstructed people, was one of the very best means of clearing up the obscure corners in one's own mind. — Thomas Huxley

Honoria Murphy Quotes By Porter Goss

I couldn't get a job with CIA today. I am not qualified. — Porter Goss

Honoria Murphy Quotes By Jesse James Garrett

If you need to take a step back from day-to-day operations and plot out the long-term direction of your user experience strategy, consultants can give you a perspective you can't get on your own. — Jesse James Garrett

Honoria Murphy Quotes By Henry T. Blackaby

Self-centered people try to keep their lives unruffled and undisturbed, safe and secure. Our temptation is to give our time and effort to the goals of this world. Then, when we are successful in the world's eyes, we seek to bring God into our world by honoring Him with our success. We may say, "Now that I have succeeded in business [or sports, or politics, or with my family, or even Christian ministry], I want to give God the glory for it!" God is not interested in receiving secondhand glory from our activity. God receives glory from His activity through our lives. The world will entice you to adopt its goals and to invest in temporal things. Resist the temptation to pursue your own goals, asking God to bless them. Rather, deny yourself and join the activity of God as He reveals it to you. — Henry T. Blackaby

Honoria Murphy Quotes By Chiwetel Ejiofor

It's hard to tell the story if you're not involved yourself, emotionally. — Chiwetel Ejiofor

Honoria Murphy Quotes By Michael Hviid Jacobsen

As Robert Musil once observed, an essay is an "attempt," but it is an attempt that is qualified and determined. For Musil, the essay eschews conventional notions of "true" and "false," "wise" and "unwise," but it is "nevertheless subject to laws that are no less strict than they appear to be delicate and ineffable" (Musil, 1953/1995, p. 301). The essay, still according to Musil, therefore lingers somewhere "between amor intellectualis and poetry. — Michael Hviid Jacobsen