Inconvertible Truth Quotes & Sayings
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Top Inconvertible Truth Quotes

Nothing in the world makes people so afraid as the influence of independent-minded people. — Albert Einstein

I'm actually with the classics in general in terms of understanding truth in an existential mode. Therefore, philosophy becomes more a way of life as opposed to simply a mode of discourse. — Cornel West

The distinction between sanity and insanity is narrower than a razor's edge, sharper than a hound's tooth, more agile than a mule deer. It is more elusive than the merest phantom. Perhaps it does not even exist; perhaps it is a phantom. — Philip K. Dick

It is the fault of our rhetoric that we cannot strongly state one fact without seeming to belie some other. — Ralph Waldo Emerson

Would you rather work forty hours a week at a job you hate or eighty hours a week doing work you love? — Jay Samit

God can enter into me, even me, and use these hands, these feet, to be His love, a love that goes on and on and on forever, endless cycle of grace. — Ann Voskamp

It would have been sad for me to spend my life just trying to superimpose stuff on people rather than trying to encourage them to look within themselves for what's of value. — Fred Rogers

Lack of clarity is a writer's truth. — Amy Tan

Kohlrabi's face had no expression at all, and suddenly Mosca could barely recognize him. His face had always seemed so honest, like an unshuttered window through which emotions shone without disguise. Perhaps his expressions had always been a magic-lantern display, a conjurer's trick. — Frances Hardinge

Thr truth is inconvertible.
Malice may attack it
and ignorance may deride it,
but in the end,
there it is ... — Winston Churchill

Want compassion is not to be numbered among the general faults of mankind. The black ingredient which fouls our disposition is envy. Hence our eyes, it is to be feared, are seldom turned up to those who are manifestly greater, better, wiser, or happier than ourselves, without some degree of malignity, we commonly look downward on the mean and miserable with sufficient benevolence and pity. — Henry Fielding

Cultivate the root; the leaves and branches will take care of themselves. — Confucius