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Unhiddenness Quotes & Sayings

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Top Unhiddenness Quotes

Unhiddenness Quotes By Jeff Galloway

A lifestyle change begins with a vision and a single step. — Jeff Galloway

Unhiddenness Quotes By Bob Harper

I found that people like rules, and I love to tell people what to do. It's not rocket science when it comes to weight loss. It's about eating a little less and moving a little bit more. — Bob Harper

Unhiddenness Quotes By Friedrich Nietzsche

For ten years you have climbed here to my cave: you would have become weary of shining and of the journey, had it not been for me, my eagle, and my serpent. — Friedrich Nietzsche

Unhiddenness Quotes By Max Liebermann

Whenever I see a Frans Hals I feel like painting, but when I see a Rembrandt I feel like giving up! — Max Liebermann

Unhiddenness Quotes By Daniel O. Dahlstrom

Aletheia, the Greek term subsequently translated "truth," literally means the unhidden, and, in awe of this unhiddenness, subsequent thinking sets aside the underlying hiddenness instead of contemplating it. Differing essentially from aletheia despite its relation to this "truth" of the first beginning, the truth grounds as the clearing for the hiddenness of historical-being. "The clearing for the concealment as the primordial-unified unfolding is the abyss of the ground that the here [Da] unfolds as" (65: 350). Time-space. — Daniel O. Dahlstrom

Unhiddenness Quotes By J.K. Rowling

Parvati positively beamed. Harry could tell that she was feeling guilty for having laughed at Hermione in Transfiguration. He looked around and saw that Hermione was beaming back, if possible even more brightly. Girls were very strange sometimes. — J.K. Rowling

Unhiddenness Quotes By Richard Branson

You shouldn't blindly accept a leader's advice. You've got to question leaders on occasion. — Richard Branson

Unhiddenness Quotes By Friedrich August Von Hayek

The effect of the people's agreeing that there must be central planning, without agreeing on the ends, will be rather as if a group of people were to commit themselves to take a journey together without agreeing where they want to go; with the result that they may all have to make a journey which most of them do not want at all. — Friedrich August Von Hayek