Neuroanatomist Quotes & Sayings
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Top Neuroanatomist Quotes
It is destiny which takes you to people who have the answers to your questions. — Aporva Kala
We should understand the Constitution as the founders meant that it should be understood. We can do this by reading their words about it, such as those contained in the Federalist Papers. Such understanding is essential if we are to preserve what God has given us. — Ezra Taft Benson
The present is the past rolled up for action, and the past is the present unrolled for understanding — Will Durant
The modern human has mastered the art of building toxic homes and cities. — Steven Magee
Painful events leave scars, true, but it turns out they're largely erasable. Jill Bolte Taylor, the neuroanatomist who had a stroke that obliterated her memory, described the event as losing '37 years of emotional baggage.' — Martha Beck
The brightest moments of human discovery are those unplanned and random instants when you thumb through a strange book in a foreign library or talk auto maintenance with a neuroanatomist. We need our searches to include cross-wiring and dumb accidents, too, not just algorithmic surety. — Michael Harris
I think science is about the search for God; it just comes at it from a different angle than religion. — Chris Carter
Help me to get my eyes off my suffering and onto you, God. — Shirley Corder
It's almost like, it's often the bad recording quality of things which makes them interesting. — Danielle Dax
Poetry is the perpetual endeavor to express the spirit of the thing, to pass the brute body and search the life and reason which causes it to exist; - to see that the object is always flowing away, whilst the spirit or necessity which causes it subsists. Its essential mark is that it betrays in every word instant activity of mind, shown in new uses of every fact and image, in preternatural quickness or perception of relations. All its words are poems. It is a presence of mind that gives a miraculous command of all means of uttering the thought and feeling of the moment. The poet squanders on the hour an amount of life that would more than furnish the seventy years of the man that stands next him. — Ralph Waldo Emerson
Clarity moves much more efficiently than violence or stress. — Byron Katie
