Huberman Scientist Quotes & Sayings
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Top Huberman Scientist Quotes

I never saw 'Titanic' as a springboard for bigger films or bigger pay cheques. I knew it could have been that, but I knew it would have destroyed me. — Kate Winslet

The community of nations may see more and more of the very kind of threat Iraq poses now: a rogue state with weapons of mass destruction, ready to use them or provide them to terrorists. If we fail to respond today, Saddam and all those who would follow in his footsteps will be emboldened tomorrow. — William J. Clinton

Those are some of the things that molecules do, given four billion years of evolution — Carl Sagan

The ideal age for a boy to own a dog is between forty-five and fifty. — Robert Benchley

It is hard to explain the huge variety of diatoms - a microorganism that has 100,000 species - in terms of natural selection. — John Tyler Bonner

Yeah, I paint in my spare time, just to relax myself and wind down a bit. — Tyson Chandler

Nice. I like a little desperation in
a guy. It builds character. — Stacey Kade

For the vast majority of Americans who work hard and play by the rules, paying the bills may be hard some months, but it's something we always do. — Ami Bera

A social movement that only moves people is merely a revolt. A movement that changes both people and institutions is a revolution. — Martin Luther King Jr.

My father loved me and he wanted to work with me and he didn't care what people would say. — Charlotte Gainsbourg

Men. < ... > They're idiots. It's like they all take a vow of stupidity or something. — Cindy Gerard

As a matter of fact, this effort at discipline had been helped by the interests of a difficult profession, but the old conclusion to which Ralph had come when he left college still held sway in his mind, and tinged his views with the melancholy belief that life for most people compels the exercise of the lower gifts and wastes the precious ones, until it forces us to agree that there is little virtue, as well as little profit, in what once seemed to us the noblest part of our inheritance. — Virginia Woolf

The object of every free government is the public good, and all lesser interests yield to it. That of every tyrannical government, is the happiness and aggrandizement of one, or a few, and to this the public felicity, and every other interest must submit. — Marcus Junius Brutus The Younger