Podeli Voznju Quotes & Sayings
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Top Podeli Voznju Quotes

We could call order by the name of God, but it would be an impersonal God. There's not much personal about the laws of physics. — Stephen Hawking

Roughly speaking, the greater the value of the metric tensor, the greater the crumpling of the sheet. No mattet how crumpled the sheet of paper, the metric tensor gives us a simple means of measuring its curvature at any point. If we flattened the crumpled sheet completely, then we would retrieve the formula of Pythagoras. — Michio Kaku

If it looks to good to be true, then it wasn't cooked by my wife. — Ian Sputnik

Drink [the shot of tequila], Mia." He repeated, quietly, using my name this time. He leaned in close to me so that I could feel the heat of his body. "Believe me," His eyes locked on mine and in a hoarse voice he whispered, "you're going to want to be drunk for what I'm going to do to you tonight. — Donya Petrock

thinker sees in his own actions attempts and questionings to obtain information about something or other; success and failure are answers to him first and foremost. — Friedrich Nietzsche

I've become one of those women who thrusts her engagement finger out all the time. — Katherine Parkinson

Photographs that transcend but do not deny their literal situation appeal to me. — Sam Abell

I believe that one can and must hope for a sane society that furthers man's capacity to love his fellow men, to work and create, to develop his reason and his objectivity of a sense of himself that is based on the experience of his productive energy.
I believe that one can and must hope for the collective regaining of a mental health that is characterized by the capacity to love and to create ... — Erich Fromm

Two daughters, pretty enough
but with hearts like blackjacks. — Anne Sexton

Power tempts even the best of men to take liberties with the truth. — Joseph Sobran

As soon as a child has left the room his strewn toys become affecting. — Ralph Waldo Emerson

If we want children to flourish, to become truly empowered, let us allow them to love the earth before we ask them to save it. — David Sobel

The 20th century gave rise to one of the greatest and most distressing paradoxes of human history: that the greatest intolerance and violence of that century were practiced by those who believed that religion caused intolerance and violence. — Alister E. McGrath