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Quotes & Sayings About Love By Great Philosophers

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Top Love By Great Philosophers Quotes

Love By Great Philosophers Quotes By Daniel Gottlieb

The story of Pi is the story of all of us. We all have tigers under our tarpaulins - tigers that, we feel, could destroy us. We think we want to be rid of our tigers. But the truth is, we would feel a great loss if they ran away, because ultimately, each tiger is part of us. — Daniel Gottlieb

Love By Great Philosophers Quotes By M.F. Moonzajer

She is beautiful like an angel, charming like a fairy and sweet like honey. — M.F. Moonzajer

Love By Great Philosophers Quotes By Julie Bowen

I have three kids. I should know how to take care of them. — Julie Bowen

Love By Great Philosophers Quotes By Justo L. Gonzalez

What good is it for you to be able to discuss the Trinity with great profundity, if you lack humility, and thereby offend the Trinity? Verily, high sounding words do not make one holy and just. But a life of virtue does make one acceptable to God. Were you to memorize the entire Bible and all the sayings of the philosophers, what good would this be for you without the love of God and without grace? Vanity of vanities. All is vanity, except loving God and serving only God.49 — Justo L. Gonzalez

Love By Great Philosophers Quotes By Bob Dylan

Then take me disappearin' through the smoke rings of my mind,
Down the foggy ruins of time, far past the frozen leaves,
The haunted, frightened trees, out to the windy beach,
Far from the twisted reach of crazy sorrow.
Yes, to dance beneath the diamond sky with one hand waving free,
Silhouetted by the sea, circled by the circus sands,
With all memory and fate driven deep beneath the waves,
Let me forget about today until tomorrow. — Bob Dylan

Love By Great Philosophers Quotes By John Mellencamp

I know a lot of funny people in a lot of funny places. — John Mellencamp

Love By Great Philosophers Quotes By Bernard DeVoto

The trouble with the sacred Individual is that he has no significance, except as he can acquire it from others, from the social whole. — Bernard DeVoto

Love By Great Philosophers Quotes By Roan Parrish

Like, you know that feeling," I try to explain, "where it's Sunday night and you have school or work the next morning but then it's a snow day and you don't have to go in? You feel like that."

"I feel like a natural disaster?" he teases, but his gaze is intent.

"No," I say, forcing myself to say what I mean. "A relief. You feel like a huge relief."

Rex's eyes go very soft. "You feel like a relief too, Daniel," he says. — Roan Parrish

Love By Great Philosophers Quotes By Moliere

New-born desires, after all, have inexplicable charms, and all the pleasure of love is in variety. — Moliere

Love By Great Philosophers Quotes By Joe Fassler

For (Levi) Grossman, no books feel more like home than C. S. Lewis's Chronicles of Narnia, which provide the template for what he likes to read - and how he wants to write. — Joe Fassler

Love By Great Philosophers Quotes By Beth Moore

If anyone does not stumble in what he says, he is a mature man who is also able to control his whole body. James 3:2 — Beth Moore

Love By Great Philosophers Quotes By John Smith

The attitude, and the mind, is where it all starts. — John Smith

Love By Great Philosophers Quotes By Mark Goddard

I kind of fell into acting. I was very lucky. — Mark Goddard

Love By Great Philosophers Quotes By Jen Wilkin

The key to enjoying wine isn't just to guzzle a lot of expensive wine, it's to learn about wine. — Jen Wilkin

Love By Great Philosophers Quotes By Glenn Branca

It scares me that people are going to stop writing music. I don't mean music that has to be physically written down, but they'll stop using their brain which is without a doubt the most powerful tool that you could have in any art. — Glenn Branca

Love By Great Philosophers Quotes By Umberto Eco

Here he was holding the clear proof of the existence of other skies, but at the same time without having to ascend beyond the celestial spheres, for he intuited many worlds in a piece of coral. Was there any need to calculate the number of forms which the atoms of the Universe could create
burning at the stake all those who said their number was not finite
when it sufficed to meditate for years on one of these marine objects to realize how the deviation of a single atom, whether willed by God or prompted by Chance, could generate inconceivable Milky Ways? — Umberto Eco