Ilog Pasig Quotes & Sayings
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Top Ilog Pasig Quotes

Life's only law is change. Everything is continuously changing, evolving and developing. Hindus say that it takes 840 million lives to become a human being, which emphasises the precious gift of being a human being. — Swami Dhyan Giten

But theological change happens though selective quoting. Every religious person does it: You quote those verses that resonate with your own religious insights and ignore or reinterpret those that undermine your certainties. Selective quoting isn't just legitimate, but essential: Religions evolve through shifts in selective quoting. — Yossi Klein Halevi

Nothing is more foreign than the world of one's childhood when one has truly left it. — Par Lagerkvist

Jacques Derrida is a very important thinker and philosopher who has made serious contributions to both philosophy and literary criticism. Roland Barthes is the one I feel most affinity for, and Michel Foucault, well, his writing influenced my novel, 'Middlesex.' — Jeffrey Eugenides

Free is the best. Anything free is good. — Sandra Bullock

More succinctly put, Inspirational Psychology offers ways to live, learn about, and practice love. — Lee L Jampolsky

As an architect, you cannot be so arrogant as to say you are 100% sure about what you do. — Renzo Piano

That's often the case, of course - that creation and madness begin to dance with each other. — Wally Lamb

If anything, you know, I think losing makes me even more motivated. — Serena Williams

The historian, predisposed to verbal evidence, who reads about rather than looks at objects, becomes dependent upon secondhand impressions and is helpless when critics disagree or interpose their own extraneous judgments between the work and the viewer. — Oscar Handlin

There is an Unger who lives on the other side of the marsh, in the boot of a giant. Seven children she has. Exactly half of them are boys. How can this be? — Lee Edward Fodi

Our moral reasoning is plagued by two illusions. The first illusion can be called the wag-the-dog illusion: We believe that our own moral judgment (the dog) is driven by our own moral reasoning (the tail). The second illusion can be called the wag-theother-dog's-tail illusion: In a moral argument, we expect the successful rebuttal of an opponent's arguments to change the opponent's mind. Such a belief is like thinking that forcing a dog's tail to wag by moving it with your hand will make the dog happy. — Sam Harris

People tend to rally around power. — Noam Chomsky

I am told that only two groups carry very little negative baggage inside of Christianity: Franciscans and Quakers. — Mirabai Starr

Even after you've won fame and fortune, every time you write you've got to write, there's no shortcut, you have to start your career all over again. — William, Saroyan