Famous Quotes & Sayings

Teubner Daniel Quotes & Sayings

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Top Teubner Daniel Quotes

Teubner Daniel Quotes By Arthur Schopenhauer

One should use common words to say uncommon things — Arthur Schopenhauer

Teubner Daniel Quotes By Brene Brown

While this experience may sound great, it was terrifying for me as a parent. What if I'm wrong? What if busy and exhausted is what it takes? What if she doesn't get to go to the college of her choice because she doesn't play the violin and speak Mandarin and French and she doesn't play six sports? What — Brene Brown

Teubner Daniel Quotes By Mark Gerzon

But what the measured prose of psychiatrists and the carefully calculated statistics of social scientists rarely capture is the experience of inner struggle. These "significant changes" do not occur automatically. In fact, they must often fight against our resistance. In this sense, midlife is a drama more worthy of a playwright than a scholar. We are characters in the play, caught at the opening of the second act, and we do not know what will happen next. — Mark Gerzon

Teubner Daniel Quotes By Edith Wharton

Silence may be as variously shaded as speech. — Edith Wharton

Teubner Daniel Quotes By Immanuel Kant

Here I shall add that the concept of change, and with it the concept of motion, as change of place, is possible only through and in the representation of time. & Motion, for example, presupposes the perception of something movable. But space considered in itself contains nothing movable; consequently motion must be something which is found in space only through experience -in other words, is an empirical datum. — Immanuel Kant

Teubner Daniel Quotes By George R R Martin

The fire that burns against the cold. — George R R Martin

Teubner Daniel Quotes By Charles Porterfield Krauth

The Pelagianizing Romanist says, Lust, or concupiscence, brings forth sin, therefore it cannot be sin, because the mother cannot be the child. We reply, Concupiscence brings forth sin, therefore it must be sin, because child and mother must have the same nature. The grand sophism of Pelagianism is the assumption that sin is confined to acts, that guilty acts can be the product of innocent condition, that the effect can be sinful, yet the cause free from sin
that the unclean can be brought forth from the clean. — Charles Porterfield Krauth

Teubner Daniel Quotes By Baruch Spinoza

The highest endeavor of the mind, and the highest virtue, it to understand things by intuition. — Baruch Spinoza