Related Quotes
endless feels four hours scoring silly sports stop time understand watch
It feels silly to watch endless hours of winter sports every four years, when we never watch them any other time, and we don't even understand the rules, which doesn't stop us from scoring everyone, every run, every skate, every race. Jill Lepore
endlessly
I feel that there is not an endlessly expandable universe of fiction readers. Jonathan Galassi
endless knowledge
Knowledge is like an endless sea. We can't know everything in life. Helen Araromi
endless financial hurt might students supply
It could hurt other students who might want financial aid. There isn't an endless supply of money. Natalie Forbort
endlessly love poetry
Form is endlessly interesting to me, and I love poetry as a formal enterprise. Mary Szybist
endless offend seems speech supply
There is an endless supply of speech that seems to offend these days. David Hudson
endless love parts period range stage time work
There is an endless range of parts I have not played. I would love to do a whole slew of period pieces. I also used to do a lot of stage work, and I would like to go back to that from time to time. Mark Margolis
endless given human life series
Human life is just a given series, an endless series of such moments, Roman Polanski
endless sympathy
I have endless sympathy for (them) because I see myself so much in them. Miranda July
knowledge last men merely passions
Passions make men live, knowledge merely makes them last Chamfort
knowledge people
People have been writing us off, people who don't have the knowledge or expertise. Michael Klim
knowledge
Our whole knowledge of the world hangs on this very slender thread: the re-gu-la-ri-ty of our experiences Luigi Pirandello
knowledge players silly suggest
Players have a lot of knowledge. It would be silly of me to say if they suggest something that I wouldn't look at it. Maurice Cheeks
knowledge
A society that fears knowledge is a society that fears itself. Bernard Beckett
knowledge talking may
Pure mathematics consists entirely of assertions to the effect that, if such and such a proposition is true of anything, then suchand such another proposition is true of that thing.... Thus mathematics may be defined as the subject in which we never know what we are talking about, nor whether what we are saying is true. Bertrand Russell
knowledge inference knows
Whatever we know without inference is mental. Bertrand Russell
knowledge historical elements
History is valuable, to begin with, because it is true; and this, though not the whole of its value, is the foundation and condition of all the rest. That all knowledge, as such, is in some degree good, would appear to be at least probable; and the knowledge of every historical fact possesses this element of goodness, even if it posses no other. Bertrand Russell
knowledge science perception
All that passes for knowledge can be arranged in a hierarchy of degrees of certainty, with arithmetic and the facts of perception at the top. Bertrand Russell