Internet Stephen Hawking Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 12 famous quotes about Internet Stephen Hawking with everyone.
Top Internet Stephen Hawking Quotes

Someone feeling wronged is like someone feeling thirsty. Don't tell them they aren't. Sit with them and have a drink. — Lemony Snicket

The determined fixing of our will upon God, and pressing toward him steadily and without deflection; this is the very center and the art of prayer. — Evelyn Underhill

Photography to me is catching a moment which is passing, and which is true. — Jacques-Henri Lartigue

She smiled at him, and bits of Moist tingled.
'Well, off you go then, Mr Lipwig,' she said. 'Brighten up the world like a little sunbeam. — Terry Pratchett

All change starts with a distant rumble at the grassroots level. — Tom Coburn

One thing I have noticed is that when you're a younger editor, you're more intense about it. As you go along, you relax a little. More and more, I feel that the book is the author's. You give the author your thoughts, and it's up to him or her to decide what to do. — Jonathan Galassi

Constant dripping hollows out a stone. — Titus Lucretius Carus

I'm not a collector. — Hayao Miyazaki

We are all now connected by the Internet, like neurons in a giant brain. — Stephen Hawking

Unwarranted search and seizure by the government officials was unacceptable to the American revolutionaries. Shouldn't it be unacceptable in the digital age, too? — Heather Brooke

Hypocrites have just as much right to live in this world as anybody. She — Harper Lee

In Dallas for the premier of '9 to 5', I had an uncanny experience, and on the plane home to Chicago I confessed it to Siskel: I had been granted a private half hour with Dolly Parton, and as we spoke I was filled with a strange ethereal grace. This was not spiritual, nor was it sexual. It was healing and comforting. Gene listened and said, "Roger, I felt the exact same thing during my interview with her." We looked at each other. What did this mean? Neither one of us ever felt that feeling again. From time to time we would refer to it in wonder. — Roger Ebert