Matematician Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 15 famous quotes about Matematician with everyone.
Top Matematician Quotes

He who often thinks of God, will have a larger mind than the man who simply plods around this narrow globe. — Charles Haddon Spurgeon

LA is the loneliest and most brutal of American cities. — Jack Kerouac

Do your own thing. Others own their own thing. If you copy too much, you'll find yourself in late night cocktail lounge cover band limbo. — Kurt Cobain

A superficial freedom to wander aimlessly here or there, to taste this or that, to make a choice of distractions, is simply a sham. It claims to be a freedom of "choice" when it has evaded the basic task of discovering who it is that chooses. — Thomas Merton

I was wasting my time, praying for love.
For a love that never comes, from someone who does not exist. — Morrissey

Beware of men bearing flowers. — Muriel Spark

It's just you, Little Monster. Own it or it will own you. — Penelope Douglas

J&K, why refugees can vote in the Lok Sabha but not in state polls, — Anonymous

The workers have nothing to gain from this war, but they stand to lose everything that is dear to them. — Clara Zetkin

There is this persistent theme in all of these notions that death is made more easy, whatever that means, if you've learned the territory before you get there. And you know, in the Mahayana Buddhist situation it even becomes as extreme as saying; 'life is essentially a preparation for death, a studying of the maps of a learning of the skills a packing of your picnic basket so that when you get out there and demons are sniffing you up one side and down the other you don't bungle your mantras'. — Terence McKenna

We are the possibilities and the unshattered dream, we are what gives life magick. — Raven Grimassi

This twenty-year-old boy was distinguished from childhood by strange qualities, a dreamer and an eccentric. A girl fell in love with him, and he went and sold her to a brothel ... — Mikhail Bulgakov

Winning to often is as disastrous as losing too often. Both get the same results, the falling off of the public's enthusiasm. — Knute Rockne