Jauniaux Philippe Quotes & Sayings
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Top Jauniaux Philippe Quotes

The more vast the amount of time we've left behind us, the more irresistible is the voice calling us to return to it. — Milan Kundera

People are disturbed enough by serial killers, but the whole notion of female violence, particularly maternal violence - the idea of mothers who kill - really unnerves people. — Caleb Carr

The historical circumstance of interest is that the tropical rain forests have persisted over broad parts of the continents since their origins as stronghold of the flowering plants 150 million years ago. — E. O. Wilson

The airlines compete with each other, but Google stands alone. Economists use two simplified models to explain the difference: perfect competition and monopoly. — Peter Thiel

Marriage doesn't create problems. It reveals them. You bring unresolved stuff into it. — Rick Warren

I never learned to count my blessings
I choose instead to dwell in my disasters — Ray Lamontagne

It was funny how I could feel all alone and under surveillance at the same time. — Cory Doctorow

In the truly great, virtue governs with the sceptre of knowledge. — Philip Sidney

If we are honest - and scientists have to be - we must admit that religion is a jumble of false assertions, with no basis in reality. — Paul Dirac

I was all set to blow some crap up. — James Rollins

They always mean beautiful things like hummingbirds. I always reply by saying that I think of a little child in east Africa with a worm burrowing through his eyeball. The worm cannot live in any other way, except by burrowing through eyeballs. I find that hard to reconcile with the notion of a divine and benevolent creator. — David Attenborough

Many simple peoples feared the exceptional individual as a disintegrating force; there is a Chinese proverb that "the great man is a public misfortune. — Will Durant

During the fifteen or twenty years in which I tried - it was not always easy with publishers, newspapers, etc. - to forbid photographs, it was not at all in order to mark a sort of blank, absence, or disappearance of the image; it was because the code that dominates at once the production of these images, the framing they are made to undergo, the social implications (showing the writer's head framed in front his bookshelves, the whole scenario) seemed to me to be, first of all, terribly boring, but also contrary to what I am trying to write and to work on. — Jacques Derrida