Famous Quotes & Sayings

Moby Math Quotes & Sayings

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Top Moby Math Quotes

Moby Math Quotes By Rachel Caine

She's nice when it suits her. That doesn't mean she's nice. — Rachel Caine

Moby Math Quotes By Steve Wozniak

Neither one of us could be sure we'd get our money back on this investment, but we just wanted to have company of our own for once because we were best friends. — Steve Wozniak

Moby Math Quotes By Andy Flower

There are 2 kind of batsmen in the world. One Sachin Tendulkar. Two all the others — Andy Flower

Moby Math Quotes By Georges Bataille

These moments of intoxication, when we defy everything, when, the anchor raised, we go merrily toward the abyss, with no more thought for the inevitable fall than for the limits given in the beginning, are the only ones when we are completely free of the ground (of laws) ...
Nothing exists that doesn't have this senseless sense - common to flames, dreams, uncontrollable laughter - in those moments when consumption accelerates, beyond the desire to endure. Even utter senselessness ultimately is always this sense made of the negation of all the others. (Isn't this sense basically that of each particular being who, as such, is the senselessness of all the others, but only if he doesn't care a damn about enduring - and thought (philosophy) is at the limit of this conflagration, like a candle blown out at the limit of a flame.) — Georges Bataille

Moby Math Quotes By Vivi Anna

You're not going to sniff my ass, are you? Like a dog? — Vivi Anna

Moby Math Quotes By Victoria Magazine

The important thing is not what they think of me, but what I think of them. — Victoria Magazine

Moby Math Quotes By Martha Gellhorn

Once you get a tyranny, you don't easily get rid of it. Much better to remember about eternal vigilance. — Martha Gellhorn

Moby Math Quotes By David Graeber

The explosion of paperwork, in turn, is a direct result of the introduction of corporate management techniques, which are always justified as ways of increasing efficiency, by introducing competition at every level. What these management techniques invariably end up meaning in practice is that everyone winds up spending most of their time trying to sell each other things: grant proposals; book proposals; assessments of our students' job and grant applications; assessments of our colleagues; prospectuses for new interdisciplinary majors, institutes, conference workshops, and universities themselves, which have now become brands to be marketed to prospective students or contributors. Marketing and PR thus come to engulf every aspect of university life. — David Graeber