Aphorisms

  1. All the world's a stage, And all the men and women merely players; They have their exits and their entrances, And one man in his time plays many parts…

    Shakespeare, (1564-1616)

  2. It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on his not understanding it.

    Upton Sinclair

  3. It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data. Insensibly one begins to twist facts to suit theories, instead of theories to suit facts.

    Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, English author

  4. Television is the first truly democratic culture — the first culture available to everybody and entirely governed by what the people want. The most terrifying thing is what people do want.

    Clive Barnes

  5. The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.

    Edmund Burke

  6. "When I use a word," Humpty Dumpty said, in a rather scornful tone, "it means just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less."

    Lewis Carroll

  7. Work expands to fill the time available for its completion.

    Parkinson's Law

  8. "The time has come," the walrus said, "to talk of many things;
    Of shoes and ships and sealing wax, Of cabbages and kings,
    And why the sea is boiling hot, And whether pigs have wings."

    Lewis Carrol

  9. A belief in a supernatural source of evil is not necessary; men alone are quite capable of every wickedness.

    Joseph Conrad, novelist (1857-1924)

  10. A billion here, a billion there, pretty soon it adds up to real money.

    U.S. Senator Everett Dirksen

  11. A book lying idle on a shelf is wasted ammunition. Like money, books must be kept in constant circulation. Lend and borrow to the maximum.

    Henry Miller, (1891-1980)

  12. A conservative is one who admires radicals centuries after they're dead.

    Leo Rosten, (1908-1997)

  13. A decent provision for the poor is the true test of civilization.

    Samuel Johnson

  14. A designer knows he has achieved perfection not when there is nothing left to add, but when there is nothing left to take away.

    Antoine de Saint-Exupery, author and aviator (1900-1945)

  15. A failure is a man who has blundered but is not able to cash in on the experience.

    Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)

  16. A fanatic is one who can't change his mind and won't change the subject.

    Winston Churchill

  17. A fool and his money are soon elected.

    Will Rogers

  18. A free America... means just this: individual freedom for all, rich or poor, or else this system of government we call democracy is only an expedient to enslave man to the machine and make him like it.

    Frank Lloyd Wright

  19. A good end cannot sanctify evil means; nor must we ever do evil, that good may come of it.

    William Penn, Quaker, founder of Pennsylvania (1644-1718)

  20. A good leader can't get too far ahead of his followers.

    Franklin D. Roosevelt, 32nd US President (1882-1945)

  21. A great many people mistake opinions for thoughts.

    Herbert V. Prochnow

  22. A leader is most effective when people barely know he exists. When his work is done, his aim fulfilled, his troops will feel they did it themselves.

    Lao Tzu

  23. A man has made at least a start on discovering the meaning of human life when he plants shade trees under which he knows full well he will never sit.

    D. Elton Trueblood

  24. A man has to live with himself, and he should see to it that he always has good company.

    Charles Evans Hughes, (1862-1948)

  25. A man should live with his superiors as he does with his fire: not too near, lest he burn; nor too far off, lest he freeze.

    Diogenes, (412-323 BCE)

  26. A man too busy to take care of his health is like a mechanic too busy to take care of his tools.

    Spanish proverb

  27. A man who has never gone to school may steal from a freight car; but if he has a university education, he may steal the whole railroad.

    Theodore Roosevelt, (1858-1919)

  28. A man who is "of sound mind" is one who keeps the inner madman under lock and key.

    Paul Valery

  29. A man's ethical behavior should be based effectually on sympathy, education, and social ties; no religious basis is necessary. Man would indeed be in a poor way if he had to be restrained by fear of punishment and hope of reward after death.

    Albert Einstein, physicist, Nobel laureate (1879-1955)

  30. A mature person is one who does not think only in absolutes, who is able to be objective even when deeply stirred emotionally, who has learned that there is both good and bad in all people and in all things, and who walks humbly and deals charitably with the circumstances of life, knowing that in this world no one is all knowing and therefore all of us need both love and charity.

    Eleanor Roosevelt, (1884-1962)

  31. A multitude of laws in a country is like a great number of physicians, a sign of weakness and malady.

    Voltaire (1694-1778)

  32. A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against its government.

    Edward Abbey, (1927-1989)

  33. A person usually has two reasons for doing something: a good reason and the real reason.

    Thomas Carlyle, (1795-1881)

  34. A poem is never finished, only abandoned.

    Paul Valery, (1871-1945)

  35. A president's hardest task is not to do what is right, but to know what is right.

    Lyndon Baines Johnson

  36. A professional is someone who can do his best work when he doesn't feel like it.

    Alistair Cooke

  37. A rock pile ceases to be a rock pile the moment a single man contemplates it, bearing within him the image of a cathedral.

    Antoine de Saint-Exupery, author and aviator (1900-1945)

  38. A small body of determined spirits fired by an unquenchable faith in their mission can alter the course of history.

    Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (1869-1948)

  39. A society that defines immediate productivity and efficiency as ultimate value, that judges all by these standards, cannot afford concern for tradition, environment, or wider social concern.

    Anonymous

  40. A society that gets rid of all its troublemakers goes downhill.

    Robert A. Heinlein, (1907-1988)

  41. A society that presumes a norm of violence and celebrates aggression, whether in the subway, on the football field, or in the conduct of its business, cannot help making celebrities of the people who would destroy it.

    Lewis H. Lapham, editor and writer (1935- )

  42. A writer is somebody for whom writing is more difficult than it is for other people.

    Thomas Mann, (1875-1955)

  43. Above all, the privately incorporated economy must be made over into a publicly responsible economy. I am aware of the magnitude of this task, but either we take democracy seriously or we do not. This corporate economy, as it is now constituted, is an undemocratic growth within the formal democracy of the United States.

    C. Wright Mills (1958)

  44. Access to power must be confined to those who are not in love with it.

    Plato

  45. Accustomed to the veneer of noise, to the shibboleths of promotion, public relations, and market research, society is suspicious of those who value silence.

    John Lahr

  46. Adulthood is the ever—shrinking period between childhood and old age. It is the apparent aim of modern industrial societies to reduce this period to a minimum.

    Thomas Szasz, (1920- )

  47. Adults are obsolete children.

    Dr. Seuss, (1904-1991)

  48. After I'm dead I'd rather have people ask why I have no monument than why I have one.

    Cato the Elder, (234-149 BCE)

  49. After the game, the king and pawn go into the same box.

    Italian Proverb

  50. All labor that uplifts humanity has dignity and importance and should be undertaken with painstaking excellence.

    Martin Luther King, Jr.

  51. All you need in this life is ignorance and confidence, and then success is sure.

    Mark Twain, (1835-1910)

  52. Almost everything that distinguishes the modern world from earlier centuries is attributable to science, which achieved its most spectacular triumphs in the seventeenth century.

    Bertrand Russell, (1872-1970)

  53. Always do right. This will surprise some people and astonish the rest.

    Mark Twain, (1835-1910)

  54. America will never be destroyed from the outside. If we falter, and lose our freedoms, it will be because we destroyed ourselves.

    Abraham Lincoln, (1809-1865)

  55. Americans have different ways of saying things. They say "elevator," we say "lift"... they say "President," we say "stupid psychopathic git."

    Alexai Sayle

  56. An expert is a person who avoids small error as he sweeps on to the grand fallacy.

    Benjamin Stolberg

  57. An eye for an eye leaves everyone blind.

    Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (1869-1948)

  58. An honest man can feel no pleasure in the exercise of power over his fellow citizens.

    Thomas Jefferson, (1743-1826)

  59. An honest man in politics shines more there than he would elsewhere.

    Mark Twain

  60. An idea is not responsible for the people who believe in it.

    Anonymous

  61. An important scientific innovation rarely makes its way by gradually winning over and converting its opponents: What does happen is that the opponents gradually die out.

    Max Planck

  62. An invasion of armies can be resisted, but not an idea whose time has come.

    Victor Hugo (1802-1885)

  63. An object in possession seldom retains the same charm that it had in pursuit.

    Gaius Plinius (c. 61-112 A.D.)

  64. And in the end, it's not the years in your life that count. It's the life in your years.

    Abraham Lincoln

  65. And the fox said to the little prince: men have forgotten this truth, but you must not forget it. You become responsible, forever, for what you have tamed.

    Antoine de Saint-Exupery

  66. Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both.

    Benjamin Franklin

  67. Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.

    Arthur C. Clarke

  68. Anyone who has ever struggled with poverty knows how extremely expensive it is to be poor.

    James Baldwin

  69. Anyone who is capable of getting themselves made President should on no account be allowed to do the job.

    Douglas Adams

  70. Art is made to disturb. Science reassures.

    Georges Braque

  71. As I would not be a slave, so I would not be a master. This expresses my idea of democracy. Whatever differs from this, to the extent of the difference, is no democracy.

    Abraham Lincoln

  72. As an adolescent I aspired to lasting fame, I craved factual certainty, and I thirsted for a meaningful vision of human life ― so I became a scientist. This is like becoming an archbishop so you can meet girls.

    Matt Cartmill, anthropology professor and author (1943- )

  73. As societies grow decadent, the language grows decadent, too. Words are used to disguise, not to illuminate, action: you liberate a city by destroying it. Words are to confuse, so that at election time people will solemnly vote against their own interests.

    Gore Vidal, (1925- )

  74. As the traveler who has once been from home is wiser than he who has never left his own doorstep, so a knowledge of one other culture should sharpen our ability to scrutinize more steadily, to appreciate more lovingly, our own.

    Margaret Mead, anthropologist (1901-1978)

  75. At bottom, every man knows perfectly well that he is a unique being, only once on this earth; and by no extraordinary chance will such a marvelously picturesque piece of diversity in unity as he is, ever be put together a second time.

    Friedrich Nietzsche, (1844-1900)

  76. At times it may be necessary to temporarily accept a lesser evil, but one must never label a necessary evil as good.

    Margaret Mead, anthropologist (1901-1978)

  77. Being defeated is often a temporary condition. Giving up is what makes it permanent.

    Marilyn vos Savant

  78. Belief like any other moving body follows the path of least resistance.

    Samuel Butler, (1612-1680)

  79. Better to remain silent and be thought a fool, than to speak and remove all doubt.

    Abraham Lincoln

  80. Beware the fury of the patient man.

    John Dryden, (1631-1700)

  81. Birth is a death sentence for mortals.

    Lonnie Liggitt

  82. Blessed is he who has found his work; let him ask no other blessedness.

    Thomas Carlyle, (1795-1881)

  83. Blessed is he who has learned to laugh at himself, for he shall never cease to be entertained.

    John Powell

  84. Boredom is a vital problem for the moralist, since at least half of the sins of mankind are caused by the fear of it.

    Bertrand Russell, (1872-1970)

  85. Both liberty and equality are among the primary goals pursued by human beings through many centuries; but total liberty for wolves is death to the lambs, total liberty of the powerful, the gifted, is not compatible with the rights to a decent existence of the weak and the less gifted.

    Isaiah Berlin

  86. Chance is perhaps the pseudonym of God when he does not wish to sign his work.

    Anatole France, (1844-1924)

  87. Complete possession is proved only by giving. All you are unable to give possesses you.

    Andre Gide

  88. Courage is not the absence of fear, but rather the judgment that something else is more important than fear.

    Ambrose Redmoon

  89. Cowardice asks the question, "Is it safe?" Expediency asks the question, "Is it politic?" Vanity asks the question, "Is it popular?" But, conscience asks the question, "Is it right?" And there comes a time when one must take a position that is neither safe, nor politic, nor popular but one must take it because one's conscience tells one that it is right.

    Martin Luther King, Jr.

  90. Creative activity could be described as a type of learning process where teacher and pupil are located in the same individual.

    Arthur Koestler, (1905-1983)

  91. Crime is contagious. If the government becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for law.

    Louis D. Brandeis, lawyer, judge, and writer (1856-1941)

  92. Dilbert Principle: The most ineffective workers are systematically moved to the place where they can do the least damage: management.

    Scott Adams

  93. Discontent is the first step in the progress of a man or a nation.

    Oscar Wilde, writer (1854-1900)

  94. Discovery consists of seeing what everybody has seen, and thinking what nobody has thought. — Albert Szent ― Györgyi Von Nagyrapolt

  95. Distrust all in whom the impulse to punish is powerful.

    Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche, (1844-1900)

  96. Do I contradict myself? Very well then I contradict myself, (I am large, I contain multitudes.)

    Walt Whitman, Song of Myself

  97. Do not be satisfied with the sole quest for economic advantages. Great affluence, in fact, can also generate great poverty.

    John Paul II

  98. Do not believe that it is very much of an advance to do the unnecessary three times as fast.

    Peter Drucker, (1909-2005)

  99. Don't anthropomorphize computers. They don't like it.

    Anonymous

  100. Don't ever take a fence down until you know why it was put up.

    Robert Frost

  101. During times of universal deceit, telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act.

    George Orwell, (1903-1950)

  102. Easy reading is damned hard writing.

    Nathaniel Hawthorne, (1804-1864)

  103. Education ... has produced a vast population able to read but unable to distinguish what is worth reading.

    G. M. Trevelyan

  104. Everyone is entitled to his own opinion but not his own facts.

    Daniel Patrick Moynihan

  105. Everywhere I go I find that a poet has been there before me.

    Sigmund Freud

  106. Evidence that contradicts the ruling belief system is held to extraordinary standards, while evidence that entrenches it is uncritically accepted.

    Carl Sagan

  107. Examinations are formidable even to the best prepared, for the greatest fool may ask more than the wisest man can answer.

    Charles Caleb Colton, (1780-1832)

  108. Experience is that marvelous thing that enables you to recognize a mistake when you make it again.

    Franklin P. Jones

  109. Experience is the comb life gives you after you lose your hair.

    Judith Stearn

  110. Experience teaches us to be most on our guard to protect liberty when the government's purpose is beneficent. Men born to freedom are naturally alert to repel invasion of their liberty by evil-minded rulers. The greatest dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men of zeal, well-meaning but without understanding.

    Louis Dembitz Brandeis, (1856-1941)

  111. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.

    Carl Sagan, (1934-1996)

  112. Faced with the choice between changing one's mind and proving that there is no need to do so, almost everyone gets busy on the proof.

    Galbraith's Law

  113. Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored.

    Aldous Huxley, (1894-1963)

  114. Fame is a vapor; popularity an accident; the only earthly certainty is oblivion.

    Mark Twain, (1835-1910)

  115. Five score years ago, a great American, in whose symbolic shadow we stand, signed the Emancipation Proclamation. ... One hundred years later, the life of the Negro is still sadly crippled by the manacles of segregation and the chains of discrimination. One hundred years later, the Negro lives on a lonely island of poverty in the midst of a vast ocean of material prosperity.

    Martin Luther King, Jr., I Have a Dream, Washington DC, Aug 28, 1963.

  116. For every major problem in this nation there is a simple solution — and it is wrong.

    H.L. Menken, (1880-1956)

  117. For every talent that poverty has stimulated it has blighted a hundred.

    John W. Gardner

  118. For under a stationary (or even a slow growing capitalism), continued efforts of the lower and middle classes to improve their positions can be met only by diminishing the absolute incomes of the upper echelons of society.

    Robert Heilbroner, 1980

  119. Free people, remember this maxim: we may acquire liberty, but it is never recovered if it is once lost.

    Jean Jacques Rousseau

  120. Freedom is the right to be wrong, not the right to do wrong.

    John G. Diefenbaker

  121. God gives every bird his worm, but he does not throw it into the nest.

    Swedish proverb

  122. God is a comedian playing to an audience too afraid to laugh.

    Voltaire, philosopher (1694-1778)

  123. God is subtle, but he is not malicious.

    Albert Einstein (1879-1955)

  124. God made man to go by motives, and he will not go without them, any more than a boat without steam or a balloon without gas.

    Henry Ward Beecher

  125. God must have loved the people in power, for he made them so much like their own image of him.

    Kenneth Patchen, (1911-1972)

  126. God protect me from self-interest masquerading as moral principles.

    Mark Twain, (1835-1910)

  127. Good advice is always certain to be ignored, but that's no reason not to give it.

    Agatha Christie

  128. Good ideas are not adopted automatically. They must be driven into practice with courageous patience.

    Admiral Hyman Rickover

  129. Good leaders make people feel that they're at the very heart of things, not at the periphery. Everyone feels that he or she makes a difference to the success of the organization. When that happens people feel centered and that gives their work meaning.

    Warren Bennis

  130. Good people do not need laws to tell them to act responsibly, while bad people will find a way around the laws.

    Plato

  131. Government is not reason, it is not eloquence, it is force; like fire, a troublesome servant and a fearful master. Never for a moment should it be left to irresponsible action.

    George Washington, (1732-1799)

  132. Grasp the subject, the words will follow.

    Cato the Elder, (234-149 BCE)

  133. Great men do not commit murder. Great nations do not start wars.

    William Jennings Bryan

  134. Great souls have wills; feeble souls have wishes.

    Chinese Proverb

  135. Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds.

    Albert Einstein (1879-1955)

  136. Great works are performed not by strength, but perseverance.

    Samuel Johnson

  137. Growth for the sake of growth is the ideology of the cancer cell.

    Edward Abbey, (1927-1989)

  138. Habit is habit and not to be flung out of the window by any man, but coaxed downstairs a step at a time.

    Mark Twain, (1835-1910)

  139. Half of the harm that is done in this world is due to people who want to feel important. They don't mean to do harm But the harm does not interest them.

    T. S. Eliot

  140. He is a hard man who is only just, and a sad one who is only wise.

    Voltaire, philosopher (1694-1778)

  141. He that is of the opinion money will do everything may well be suspected of doing everything for money.

    Ben Franklin

  142. He uses statistics as a drunken man uses lamp posts― for support rather than for illumination.

    Andrew Lang

  143. He who allows oppression, shares the crime.

    Erasmus Darwin

  144. He who asks is a fool for five minutes, but he who does not ask remains a fool forever.

    Chinese proverb

  145. He who fights with monsters might take care lest he thereby become a monster. And if you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you.

    Friedrich Nietzsche, (1844-1900)

  146. He who has a why can endure any how.

    Friedrich Nietzsche

  147. He who has imagination without learning has wings and no feet.

    Joseph Joubert, essayist (1754-1824)

  148. He who is cruel to animals becomes hard also in his dealings with men. We can judge the heart of a man by his treatment of animals.

    Immanuel Kant, (1724-1804)

  149. He who laughs, lasts.

    Mary Pettibone Poole

  150. He who loves practice without theory is like the sailor who boards ship without a rudder and compass and never knows where he may cast.

    Leonardo da Vinci

  151. He who opens a school door, closes a prison.

    Victor Hugo, (1802-1885)

  152. He who sacrifices his conscience to ambition burns a picture to obtain the ashes.

    Chinese Proverb

  153. He who says organization says oligarchy.

    Robert Michels, 1915

  154. He's the best physician who knows the worthlessness of the most medicines.

    Benjamin Franklin, (1706-1790)

  155. Heaven is under our feet as well as over our heads.

    Henry David Thoreau, (1817-1862)

  156. High sentiments always win in the end, The leaders who offer blood, toil, tears and sweat always get more out of their followers than those who offer safety and a good time. When it comes to the pinch, human beings are heroic.

    George Orwell

  157. History buffs probably noted the reunion at a Washington party a few weeks ago of three ex-presidents: Carter, Ford and Nixon - See No Evil, Hear No Evil and Evil.

    Bob Dole

  158. History is a vast early warning system.

    Norman Cousins, (1915-1990)

  159. History is an account, mostly false, of events, mostly unimportant, which are brought about by rulers, mostly knaves, and soldiers, mostly fools.

    Ambrose Bierce

  160. History is the study of the world's crime.

    Voltaire (1694-1778)

  161. History teaches that grave threats to liberty often come in times of urgency, when constitutional rights seem too extravagant to endure.

    Thurgood Marshall, (1908-1993)

  162. History will have to record that the greatest tragedy of this period of social transition was not the strident clamor of the bad people, but the appalling silence of the good people.

    Martin Luther King, Jr.

  163. Home is the place where, when you have to go there, they have to take you in.

    Robert Frost

  164. Hot lead can be almost as effective coming from a linotype as from a firearm.

    John O'Hara, (1905-1970)

  165. How can we expect another to keep our secret if we have been unable to keep it ourselves.

    Francois de La Rochefoucauld, (1613-1680)

  166. Humility like darkness reveals the heavenly lights.

    Henry David Thoreau

  167. Humor is just another defense against the universe.

    Mel Brooks

  168. Hypocrisy is the homage which vice pays to virtue.

    Francois, duc de La Rochefoucauld, moralist (1613-1680)

  169. I am I plus my surroundings and if I do not preserve the latter, I do not preserve myself.

    Jose Ortega Y Gasset [Meditations on Quixote] (1883-1955)

  170. I am free of all prejudices. I hate everyone equally.

    W. C. Fields

  171. I am no more humble than my talents require.

    Oscar Levant, composer (1906-1972)

  172. I am not a champion of lost causes, but of causes not yet won.

    Norman Thomas

  173. I am what time, circumstance, history, have made of me, certainly, but I am also, much more than that. So are we all.

    James A. Baldwin

  174. I ask you to judge me by the enemies I have made.

    Franklin D. Roosevelt, (1882-1945)

  175. I assert that the cosmic religious experience is the strongest and the noblest driving force behind scientific research.

    Albert Einstein (1879-1955)

  176. I believe I found the missing link between animal and civilized man. It is us.

    Konrad Lorenz, ethologist, Nobel laureate (1903-1989)

  177. I believe in God, only I spell it Nature.

    Frank Lloyd Wright, (1867-1959)

  178. I believe in equality for everyone, except reporters and photographers.

    Mohandas Gandhi

  179. I believe that what may be called classic social analysis is a definable and usable set of traditions; that its essential feature is the concern with historical social structures; and that its problems are of direct relevance to urgent public issues and insistent human troubles.

    C. Wright Mills, The Sociological Imagination, 1959

  180. I believe there are more instances of the abridgment of the rights of the people by the gradual and silent encroachments of those in power than by violent and sudden usurpations.

    James Madison, (1751-1836)

  181. I can find in my undergraduate classes, bright students who do not know that the stars rise and set at night, or even that the Sun is a star.

    Carl Sagan (1934-1996)

  182. I can't go back to yesterday, because I was a different person then.

    Lewis Carroll (1832-1898)

  183. I cannot imagine a God who rewards and punishes the objects of his creation, whose purposes are modeled after our own — a God, in short, who is but a reflection of human frailty.

    Albert Einstein, (1879-1955)

  184. I care not for a man's religion whose dog or cat are not the better for it.

    Abraham Lincoln

  185. I count him braver who overcomes his desires than him who conquers his enemies, for the hardest victory is over self.

    Aristotle, philosopher (384-322 BCE)

  186. I distrust those people who know so well what God wants them to do because I notice it always coincides with their own desires.

    Susan B Anthony, (1820-1906)

  187. I do not believe that women are better than men. We have not wrecked railroads, nor corrupted legislature, nor done many unholy things that men have done; but then we must remember that we have not had the chance.

    Jane Addams

  188. I do not feel obliged to believe that the same God who has endowed us with sense, reason, and intellect has intended us to forgo their use.

    Galileo Galilei

  189. I do not feel obliged to believe that the same God who has endowed us with sense, reason, and intellect has intended us to forgo their use.

    Galileo Galilei, physicist and astronomer (1564-1642)

  190. I do not know what I may appear to the world; but to myself I seem to have been only like a boy playing on the seashore, and diverting myself now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me.

    Isaac Newton, (1642-1727)

  191. I do not rule Russia; ten thousand clerks do.

    Czar Nicholas I

  192. I don't hate my enemies. After all, I made 'em.

    Red Skelton, comedian (1913-1997)

  193. I fear nothing, I hope for nothing, I am free.

    Nikos Kazantzakis

  194. I find that principles have no real force except when one is well fed.

    Mark Twain, (1835-1910)

  195. I happen temporarily to occupy this big White House. I am living witness that any one of your children may look to come here as my father's child has.

    Abraham Lincoln, (1809-1865)

  196. I hate war as only a soldier who has lived it can, only as one who has seen its brutality, its futility, its stupidity.

    Dwight D. Eisenhower, U.S. general and 34th president (1890-1969)

  197. I have always found that mercy bears richer fruits than strict justice.

    Abraham Lincoln, 16th U.S. President (1809-1865)

  198. I have learned through bitter experience the one supreme lesson to conserve my anger, and as heat conserved is transmitted into energy, even so our anger controlled can be transmitted into a power that can move the world.

    Mahatma Gandhi (1869-1948)

  199. I have learnt silence from the talkative, toleration from the intolerant, and kindness from the unkind; yet strange, I am ungrateful to these teachers.

    Khalil Gibran, mystic, poet, and artist (1883-1931)

  200. I have never met a man so ignorant that I couldn't learn something from him.

    Galileo Galilei, (1564-1642)

  201. I have often wondered how it is that every man loves himself more than all the rest of men, but yet sets less value on his own opinion of himself than on the opinion of others.

    Marcus Aurelius, philosopher (121-180)

  202. I have suffered from being misunderstood, but I would have suffered a hell of a lot more if I had been understood.

    Clarence Darrow, (1857-1938)

  203. I have yet to hear a man ask for advice on how to combine marriage and a career.

    Gloria Steinem (1934- )

  204. I know I am among civilized men because they are fighting so savagely.

    Voltaire (1694-1778)

  205. I like pigs. Dogs look up to us. Cats look down on us. Pigs treat us as equals.

    Sir Winston Churchill

  206. I live in that solitude which is painful in youth, but delicious in the years of maturity.

    Albert Einstein (1879-1955)

  207. I love mankind. It's the people I can't stand.

    Charles Schultz

  208. I love my country too much to be a nationalist.

    Albert Camus, (1913-1960)

  209. I may disagree with what you have to say, but I shall defend, to the death, your right to say it.

    Voltaire (1694-1778)

  210. I never found the companion that was so companionable as solitude.

    Henry David Thoreau, (1817-1862)

  211. I never think of the future. It comes soon enough.

    Albert Einstein (1879-1955)

  212. I never vote for anyone; I always vote against.

    W.C. Fields, (1880-1946)

  213. I place economy among the first and most important republican virtues, and public debt as the greatest of the dangers to be feared. To preserve our independence, we must not let our rulers load us with perpetual debt.

    Thomas Jefferson, (1743-1826)

  214. I react pragmatically. Where the market works, I'm for that. Where the government is necessary, I'm for that. I'm deeply suspicious of somebody who says, "I'm in favor of privatization," or, "I'm deeply in favor of public ownership." I'm in favor of whatever works in the particular case.

    John Kenneth Galbraith, economist (1908-2006)

  215. I saw the angel in the marble and carved until I set him free.

    Michelangelo Buonarroti, (1475-1564)

  216. I sometimes wonder if two thirds of the globe is covered in red carpet.

    Prince Charles

  217. I think there is a world market for maybe five computers.

    Thomas Watson, chairman of IBM, 1958

  218. I took a speed reading course and read "War and Peace" in twenty minutes. It involves Russia.

    Woody Allen, (1935- )

  219. I used to be Snow White, but I drifted.

    Mae West

  220. I want to be thoroughly used up when I die, for the harder I work the more I live. I rejoice in life for its own sake.

    George Bernard Shaw

  221. I want to stay as close to the edge as I can without going over. Out on the edge you see all kinds of things you can't see from the center.

    Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., (1922-2008 )

  222. I would rather be able to appreciate things I can not have than to have things I am not able to appreciate.

    Elbert Hubbard

  223. I would rather be exposed to the inconveniences attending too much liberty than to those attending too small a degree of it.

    Thomas Jefferson, (1743-1826)

  224. I would rather be the man who bought the Brooklyn Bridge than the one who sold it.

    Will Rogers

  225. I would rather die standing than live on my knees!

    Emiliano Zapata

  226. I would rather try to persuade a man to go along, because once I have persuaded him he will stick. If I scare him, he will stay just as long as he is scared, and then he is gone.

    Dwight D. Eisenhower, 1890-1969)

  227. I'm a great believer in luck and I find the harder I work, the more I have of it.

    Thomas Jefferson, (1743-1826)

  228. I'm not afraid of storms, for I'm learning to sail my ship.

    Louisa May Alcott

  229. I'm not at all contemptuous of comforts, but they have their place and it is not first.

    E. F. Schumacher

  230. I'm proud of the fact that I never invented weapons to kill.

    Thomas Edison, (1847-1931)

  231. I'm proud to pay taxes in the United States; the only thing is, I could be just as proud for half the money.

    Arthur Godfrey

  232. I'm sometimes asked "Why do you spend so much of your time and money talking about kindness to animals when there is so much cruelty to men?" I answer: "I am working at the roots."

    George T. Angell, (1823-1909)

  233. Idealism is the noble toga that political gentlemen drape over their will to power.

    Aldous Huxley

  234. Ideals are like stars; you will not succeed in touching them with your hands. But like the seafaring man on the desert of waters, you choose them as your guides, and following them you will reach your destiny.

    Carl Schurz, (1829-1906)

  235. If God created us in his own image, we have more than reciprocated.

    Voltaire (1694-1778)

  236. If I could drop dead right now, I'd be the happiest man alive.

    Samuel Goldwyn

  237. If I have any beliefs about immortality, it is that certain dogs I have known will go to heaven, and very, very few persons.

    James Thurber (1894-1961)

  238. If I have ever made any valuable discoveries, it has been owing more to patient observation than to any other reason.

    Isaac Newton

  239. If I have seen farther than others, it is because I have stood on the shoulders of giants.

    Isaac Newton (1642-1727)

  240. If I seem to take part in politics, it is only because politics encircles us today like the coil of a snake from which one cannot get out, no matter how much one tries. I wish therefore to wrestle with the snake.

    Mahatma Gandhi (1869-1948)

  241. If I were not an atheist, I would believe in a God who would choose to save people on the basis of the totality of their lives and not the pattern of their words. I think he would prefer an honest and righteous atheist to a TV preacher whose every word is God, God, God, and whose every deed is foul, foul, foul.

    Isaac Asimov, (1920-1992)

  242. If I were two-faced, would I be wearing this one?

    Abraham Lincoln

  243. If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land, it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy.

    James Madison, (1751-1836)

  244. If a little knowledge is dangerous, where is the man who has so much as to be out of danger?

    Thomas Henry Huxley

  245. If a man loves the labour of his trade, apart from any question of success or fame, the gods have called him.

    Robert Louis Stevenson

  246. If every man could act as he chose, the whole of history would be a tissue of disconnected accidents.

    Leo Tolstoy

  247. If human values are removed from production, how can they be preserved in consumption? How can we value our lives if we devalue them in making a living?

    Wendell Berry, The Unsettling of America

  248. If it keeps up, man will atrophy all his limbs but the push-button finger.

    Frank Lloyd Wright

  249. If mankind minus one were of one opinion, then mankind is no more justified in silencing the one than the one ― if he had the power ― would be justified in silencing mankind.

    John Stuart Mill, philosopher and economist (1806-1873)

  250. If money be not thy servant, it will be thy master. The covetous man cannot so properly be said to possess wealth, as that may be said to possess him.

    Francis Bacon, (1561-1626)

  251. If one does not know to which port one is sailing, no wind is favorable.

    Seneca

  252. If only there were evil people somewhere insidiously committing evil deeds and it were necessary only to separate them from the rest of us and destroy them. But the line dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every human being. And who is willing to destroy a piece of his own heart?

    Alexander Solzhenitsyn, (1918- )

  253. If people are good only because they fear punishment, and hope for reward, then we are a sorry lot indeed.

    Albert Einstein, physicist, Nobel laureate (1879-1955)

  254. If privacy is outlawed, only outlaws will have privacy.

    Phil Zimmermann, cryptographer (1954- )

  255. If the proportion between the natural increase of population and food which I have given be in any degree near the truth, it will appear, on the contrary, that the period when the number of men surpass their means of subsistence has long since arrived, and that this necessity oscillation, this constantly subsisting cause of periodical misery, has existed ever since we have had any histories of mankind, does exist at present, and will for ever continue to exist, unless some decided change take place in the physical constitution of our nature.

    T. Robert Malthus, 1798

  256. If the rich could hire someone else to die for them, the poor would make a wonderful living.

    Jewish Proverb

  257. If there be time to expose through discussion the falsehood and the fallacies, to avert the evil by the processes of education, the remedy to be applied is more speech, not enforced silence.

    Louis Dembitz Brandeis, (1856-1941)

  258. If there existed no external means for dimming their consciences, one-half of the men would at once shoot themselves, because to live contrary to one's reason is a most intolerable state, and all men of our time are in such a state.

    Leo Tolstoy, (1828-1910)

  259. If they can get you asking the wrong questions, they don't have to worry about the answers.

    Thomas Pynchon, (1937- )

  260. If today is the first day of the rest of your life, what was yesterday?

    Anonymous

  261. If voting changed anything, they'd make it illegal.

    Emma Goldman

  262. If we all worked on the assumption that what is accepted as true is really true, there would be little hope of advance.

    Orville Wright

  263. If we continue to develop our technology without wisdom or prudence, our servant may prove to be our executioner.

    Omar N. Bradley

  264. If we could first know where we are, and whither we are tending, we could better judge what to do, and how to do it.

    Abraham Lincoln, U.S. President

  265. If we could read the secret history of our enemies we should find in each man's life sorrow and suffering enough to disarm all hostility.

    Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

  266. If we desire respect for the law, we must first make the law respectable.

    Louis D. Brandeis

  267. If we don't believe in freedom of expression for people we despise, we don't believe in it at all.

    Noam Chomsky, (1928- )

  268. If we encounter a man of rare intellect, we should ask him what books he reads.

    Ralph Waldo Emerson

  269. If we had no winter, the spring would not be so pleasant: if we did not sometimes taste of adversity, prosperity would not be so welcome.

    Anne Bradstreet

  270. If we make peaceful revolution impossible, we make violent revolution inevitable.

    John F. Kennedy, (1917-1963)

  271. If we were to wake up some morning and find that everyone was the same race, creed and color, we would find some other cause for prejudice by noon.

    George D. Aiken, (1892-1984)

  272. If you are afraid of being lonely, don't try to be right.

    Jules Renard, (1864-1910)

  273. If you aren't fired with enthusiasm, you will be fired with enthusiasm.

    Vince Lombardi

  274. If you aren't fired with enthusiasm, you will be fired with enthusiasm.

    Vince Lombardi

  275. If you believe the doctors, nothing is wholesome; if you believe the theologians, nothing is innocent; if you believe the military, nothing is safe.

    Lord Salisbury, British prime minister (1830-1903)

  276. If you don't find God in the next person you meet, it is a waste of time looking for him further.

    Mahatma Gandhi

  277. If you don't find God in the next person you meet, it is a waste of time looking for him further.

    Mahatma Gandhi (1869-1948)

  278. If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.

    Yogi Berra

  279. If you don't like being alone, you may not like the person you're with.

    Peggy Dugan

  280. If you give me six lines written by the most honest man, I will find something in them to hang him.

    Cardinal Richelieu (1585-1642)

  281. If you hate a person, you hate something in him that is part of yourself. What isn't part of ourselves doesn't disturb us.

    Herman Hesse

  282. If you have the same ideas as everybody else but have them one week earlier than everyone else then you will be hailed as a visionary. But if you have them five years earlier you will be named a lunatic.

    Barry Jones, politician, author (1932- )

  283. If you pick up a starving dog and make him prosperous, he will not bite you. This is the principal difference between a dog and a man.

    Mark Twain, (1835-1910)

  284. If you rest, you rust.

    Helen Hayes

  285. If you stand up and be counted, from time to time you may get yourself knocked down. But remember this: A man flattened by an opponent can get up again. A man flattened by conformity stays down for good.

    Thomas J. Watson

  286. If you think education is expensive, try ignorance.

    Derek Bok, President, Harvard University

  287. If you want creative workers, give them enough time to play.

    John Cleese, (1939- )

  288. If you want total security, go to prison. There you're fed, clothed, given medical care and so on. The only thing lacking... is freedom.

    Dwight D. Eisenhower, (1890-1969)

  289. If you want your children to turn out well, spend twice as much time with them, and half as much money.

    Abigail Van Buren, (1918- )

  290. If you wish to make an apple pie truly from scratch, you must first invent the universe.

    Carl Sagan, (1934-1996)

  291. If your morals make you dreary, depend on it they are wrong.

    Robert Louis Stevenson, novelist, essayist, and poet (1850-1894)

  292. If...the machine of government...is of such a nature that it requires you to be the agent of injustice to another, then, I say, break the law.

    Henry David Thoreau

  293. Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge.

    Charles Darwin, (1809-1882)

  294. In Germany they came first for the Communists and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Communist. Then they came for the Jews and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew. Then they came for the trade unionists and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a trade unionist. Then they came for the Catholics and I didn't speak up because I was a Protestant. Then they came for me― and by that time no one was left to speak up.

    Martin Niemöller (1892-1984)

  295. In a classroom the teacher ought to be trying to show others how one man thinks ― and at the same time reveal what a fine feeling he gets when he does it well.

    C. Wright Mills, 1959

  296. In a completely rational society, the best of us would be teachers and the rest of us would have to settle for something less, because passing civilization along from one generation to the next ought to be the highest honor and the highest responsibility anyone could have.

    Lee Iacocca, (1924- )

  297. In a consumer society there are inevitably two kinds of slaves: the prisoners of addiction and the prisoners of envy.

    Ivan Illich, priest (1926-2002)

  298. In a democracy dissent is an act of faith. Like medicine, the test of its value is not in its taste, but in its effects.

    J. William Fulbright, US Senator (1905-1995)

  299. In a time of drastic change it is the learners who inherit the future. The learned usually find themselves equipped to live in a world that no longer exists.

    Eric Hoffer, (1902-1983)

  300. In a time of drastic change, it is the learners who inherit the future. The learned usually find themselves equipped to live in a world that no longer exists.

    Eric Hoffer

  301. In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.

    George Orwell

  302. In democracy it's your vote that counts; In feudalism it's your count that votes.

    Mogens Jallberg

  303. In matters of conscience, the law of majority has no place.

    Mohandas K. Gandhi

  304. In my humble opinion, non-cooperation with evil is as much a duty as is cooperation with good.

    Mahatma Gandhi (1869-1948)

  305. In nature there are neither rewards nor punishments; there are consequences.

    Robert Green Ingersoll, lawyer and orator (1833-1899)

  306. In order to improve the mind, we ought less to learn than to contemplate.

    Rene Descartes, (1596-1650)

  307. In order to see birds it is necessary to become a part of the silence.

    Robert Lynd

  308. In our considerations of the future, we must expect a great deal of continuity with our past.

    Frank W. Elwell

  309. In questions of science, the authority of a thousand is not worth the humble reasoning of a single individual.

    Galileo Galilei, (1564-1642)

  310. In questions of science, the authority of a thousand is not worth the humble reasoning of a single individual.

    Galileo Galilei, physicist and astronomer (1564-1642)

  311. In rivers, the water that you touch is the last of what has passed and the first of that which comes; so with present time.

    Leonardo da Vinci, (1452-1519)

  312. In science it often happens that scientists say, "You know that's a really good argument; my position is mistaken," and then they would actually change their minds and you never hear that old view from them again. They really do it. It doesn't happen as often as it should, because scientists are human and change is sometimes painful. But it happens every day. I cannot recall the last time something like that happened in politics or religion.

    Carl Sagan, (1934-1996)

  313. In science, "fact" can only mean "confirmed to such a degree that it would be perverse to withhold provisional assent." I suppose that apples might start to rise tomorrow, but the possibility does not merit equal time in physics classrooms.

    Stephen Jay Gould

  314. In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.

    Dwight D. Eisenhower, 1961

  315. In the end, our society will be defined not only by what we create, but by what we refuse to destroy.

    John C. Sawhill (1936-2000)

  316. In the faces of men and women I see God.

    Walt Whitman, (1819-1892)

  317. In the long course of history, having people who understand your thought is much greater security than another submarine.

    James William Fulbright

  318. In the long run, we're all dead.

    John Maynard Keynes

  319. In the presence of eternity, the mountains are as transient as the clouds.

    Robert Green Ingersoll, (1833-1899)

  320. In the presence of eternity, the mountains are as transient as the clouds.

    Robert Green Ingersoll, lawyer and orator (1833-1899)

  321. In the republic of mediocrity genius is dangerous.

    Robert G. Ingersoll, (1833-1899)

  322. In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice; In practice, there is.

    Chuck Reid

  323. In this world of sin and sorrow there is always something to be thankful for; as for me, I rejoice that I am not a Republican.

    H. L. Mencken

  324. In times when the government imprisons any unjustly, the true place for a just man is also the prison.

    Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)

  325. In truth you owe naught to any man. You owe all to all men.

    Khalil Gibran (1883-1931)

  326. Indeed, history is nothing more than a tableau of crimes and misfortunes.

    Voltaire

  327. Information is the currency of democracy.

    Thomas Jefferson

  328. Insanity in individuals is something rare― but in groups, parties, nations and epochs, it is the rule.

    Friedrich Nietzsche, (1844-1900)

  329. Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.

    Albert Einstein, (1879-1955)

  330. Intellectual "work" is misnamed; it is a pleasure, a dissipation, and is its own highest reward.

    Mark Twain,

  331. Iron rusts from disuse, stagnant water loses its purity, and in cold weather becomes frozen, even so does inaction sap the vigor of the mind.

    Leonardo Da Vinci, (1452-1519)

  332. Irreverence is the champion of liberty and its only sure defense.

    Mark Twain, (1835-1910)

  333. Is not the core of nature in the heart of man?

    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

  334. Is this true or only clever?

    Augustine Birrell

  335. It [the state] can, as long as production is expanding, increase the absolute living standards of the masses; it cannot change the basic structure of inequality, for that is essential to the accumulation of capital― that is, to the survival and perpetuation of the system itself.

    Michael Harrington, 1976

  336. It ain't braggin' if you can back it up!

    Dizzy Dean

  337. It has always seemed strange to me that in our endless discussions about education so little stress is laid on the pleasure of becoming an educated person, the enormous interest it adds to life. To be able to be caught up into the world of thought — that is to be educated.

    Edith Hamilton, educator and writer (1867-1963)

  338. It has been my experience that folks who have no vices have very few virtues.

    Abraham Lincoln

  339. It has yet to be proven that intelligence has any survival value.

    Arthur C. Clarke

  340. It is a bit embarrassing to have been concerned with the human problem all one's life and find at the end that one has no more to offer by way of advice than "try to be a little kinder."

    Aldous Huxley, (1894-1963)

  341. It is a dangerous business going out your front door.

    JRR Tolkein

  342. It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education.

    Albert Einstein (1879-1955)

  343. It is a very lonely life that a man leads, who becomes aware of truths before their times.

    Thomas Brackett Reed, politician (1839-1902)

  344. It is always the secure who are humble.

    G. K. Chesterton, (1874-1936)

  345. It is an ironic habit of human beings to run faster when we have lost our way.

    Rollo May, (1909-1994)

  346. It is as hard for the good to suspect evil, as it is for the bad to suspect good.

    Marcus Tullius Cicero, (106-43 BCE)

  347. It is bad luck to be superstitious.

    Andrew Mathis

  348. It is better to be roughly right than to be precisely wrong.

    John Maynard Keynes

  349. It is by the goodness of God that in our country we have those three unspeakably precious things: freedom of speech, freedom of conscience, and the prudence never to practice either of them.

    Mark Twain, (1835-1910)

  350. It is curious that physical courage should be so common in the world and moral courage so rare.

    Mark Twain, (1835-1910)

  351. It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.

    Voltaire (1694-1778)

  352. It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his job depends on not understanding it.

    Upton Sinclair

  353. It is important that students bring a certain ragamuffin, barefoot, irreverence to their studies; they are not here to worship what is known, but to question it.

    J. Bronowski [The Ascent of Man]

  354. It is impossible to mechanize production without mechanizing consumption, impossible to to make machines of soil, plants, and animals without making machines also of people.

    Wendell Berry, The Unsettling of America

  355. It is in vain to hope to please all alike. Let a man stand with his face in what direction he will, he must necessarily turn his back on one half of the world.

    George Dennison Prentice

  356. It is inaccurate to say I hate everything. I am strongly in favor of common sense, common honesty, and common decency. This makes me forever ineligible for public office.

    H. L. Mencken, (1880-1956)

  357. It is man's sympathy with all creatures that first makes him truly a man.

    Albert Schweitzer

  358. It is my ambition to say in ten sentences what others say in a whole book.

    Friedrich Nietzsche

  359. It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society.

    J. Krishnamurti, philosopher (1895-1986)

  360. It is not enough to be busy, so are the ants. The question is: what are we busy about?

    Henry David Thoreau

  361. It is not enough to have a good mind. The main thing is to use it well.

    Rene Descartes, "Le Discours de la Methode," 1637

  362. It is not how old you are, but how you are old.

    Jules Renard, writer (1864-1910)

  363. It is not necessarily true that averaging the averages of different populations gives the average of the combined population.

    Simpson's Paradox

  364. It is not only for what we do that we are held responsible, but also for what we do not do.

    Moliere

  365. It is not the consciousness of men that determines their existence, but their social existence that determines their consciousness

    Karl Marx, 1859

  366. It is not the number of victims or the degree of cruelty that is distinctive; it is the fact that the acts committed and the acts that nobody protests are split from the consciousness of men in an uncanny, even a schizophrenic manner. The atrocities of our time are done by men as "functions" of social machinery― men possessed by an abstracted view that hides from them the human beings who are their victims and, as well, their own humanity. They are inhuman acts because they are impersonal. They are not sadistic but merely businesslike; they are not aggressive but merely efficient; they are not emotional at all but technically clean — cut.

    C. Wright Mills, 1958

  367. It is not the strongest of the species that survive, nor the most intelligent, but the one most responsive to change.

    Charles Darwin, (1809-1882)

  368. It is not too much to say that in the extreme development the chance to reason of most men is destroyed, as rationality increases and its locus, its control, is moved from the individual to the big — scale organization. There is then rationality without reason. Such rationality is not commensurate with freedom but the destroyer of it.

    C. Wright Mills, 1959

  369. It is not what we do, but also what we do not do, for which we are accountable.

    Moliere, (1622-1673)

  370. It is not worth an intelligent man's time to be in the majority. By definition, there are already enough people to do that.

    G. H. Hardy

  371. It is one of the commonest of mistakes to consider that the limit of our power of perception is also the limit of all there is to perceive.

    C.W. Leadbeater

  372. It is only those who have neither fired a shot nor heard the shrieks and groans of the wounded who cry aloud for blood, more vengeance, more desolation. War is hell.

    William Tecumseh Sherman, (1820-1891)

  373. It is proof of a base and low mind for one to wish to think with the masses or majority, merely because the majority is the majority. Truth does not change because it is, or is not, believed by a majority of the people.

    Giordano Bruno

  374. It is said an Eastern monarch once charged his wise men to invent him a sentence to be ever in view, and which should be true and appropriate in all times and situations. They presented him the words: "And this, too, shall pass away." How much it expresses! How chastening in the hour of pride! How consoling in the depths of affliction!

    Abraham Lincoln, (1809-1865)

  375. It is the characteristic of the most stringent censorships that they give credibility to the opinions they attack.

    Voltaire, (1694-1778)

  376. It is the chiefest point of happiness that a man is willing to be what he is.

    Desiderius Erasmus

  377. It is the first of all problems for a man to find out what kind of work he is to do in this universe.

    Thomas Carlyle

  378. It is the theory that decides what can be observed.

    Albert Einstein

  379. It is well to remember that the entire universe, with one trifling exception, is composed of others.

    John Andrew Holmes

  380. It is with words as with sunbeams, the more they are condensed, the deeper they burn.

    Robert Southey (1774-1843)

  381. It is wrong to encourage a man or a people in evil-doing; it is wrong to aid and abet a national crime simply because it is unpopular not to do so.

    W. E. B. Du Bois

  382. It isn't that they can't see the solution. It's that they can't see the problem.

    G. K. Chesterton

  383. It must be remembered that necessity is only the mother of invention; socially accumulated knowledge is its father.

    Robert K. Merton, (1910-2003)

  384. It often shows an excellent command of language to say nothing.

    Karol Newlin

  385. It seems like the less a statesman amounts to the more he adores the flag.

    Kin Hubbard, humorist (1868-1930)

  386. It seldom happens that any felicity comes so pure as not to be tempered and allayed by some mixture of sorrow.

    Miguel de Cervantes

  387. It would indeed be ironic if, in the name of national defense, we would sanction the subversion of one of those liberties which make the defense of our nation worthwhile.

    Earl Warren, (1891-1974)

  388. It's a shallow life that doesn't give a person a few scars.

    Garrison Keillor, (1942- )

  389. It's all right to tell a man to lift himself by his own bootstraps, but it is a cruel jest to say to a bootless man that he ought to lift himself by his own bootstraps.

    Martin Luther King, Jr. (1929-1968)

  390. It's interesting to read the archives of Nazi Germany, fascist Japan, the Soviet Union. The leaders are acting from the highest imaginable motives, and probably believed it. It is remarkably easy to come to believe what it is convenient to believe. That's the secret of being a "responsible intellectual," someone who serves power abjectly while believing oneself to be an independent thinker.

    Noam Chomsky

  391. It's not the voting that's democracy; it's the counting.

    Tom Stoppard

  392. It's tough to make predictions, especially about the future.

    Yogi Berra

  393. Journalism is merely history's first draft.

    Geoffrey C. Ward

  394. Just as a cautious businessman avoids tying up all his capital in one concern, so, perhaps, worldly wisdom will advise us not to look for the whole of our satisfaction from a single aspiration.

    Sigmund Freud, (1856-1939)

  395. Just as appetite comes by eating so work brings inspiration.

    Igor Stravinsky, (1882-1971)

  396. Just because you do not take an interest in politics doesn't mean politics won't take an interest in you.

    Pericles, (430 BCE)

  397. Just think of the tragedy of teaching children not to doubt.

    Clarence Darrow, lawyer and author (1857-1938)

  398. Justice will not be served until those who are unaffected are as outraged as those who are.

    Benjamin Franklin, (1706-1790)

  399. Keep away from people who try to belittle your ambitions. Small people always do that, but the really great make you feel that you, too, can become great.

    Mark Twain, (1835-1910)

  400. Kindness is in our power, even when fondness is not.

    Samuel Johnson, lexicographer (1709-1784)

  401. Knowledge is a process of piling up facts; wisdom lies in their simplification.

    Martin H. Fischer

  402. Knowledge is of two kinds. We know a subject ourselves, or we know where we can find information upon it.

    Samuel Johnson

  403. Knowledge tells us that a tomato is a fruit; wisdom prevents us from putting it into a fruit salad.

    Miles Kington

  404. Labor is prior to, and independent of, capital. Capital is only the fruit of labor, and could never have existed if labor had not first existed. Labor is the superior of capital, and deserves the much higher consideration.

    Abraham Lincoln, State of the Union, 1861

  405. Lack of money is the root of all evil.

    George Bernard Shaw

  406. Language exerts hidden power, like a moon on the tides.

    Rita Mae Brown, writer (1944- )

  407. Language is a city to the building of which every human being brought a stone.

    Ralph Waldo Emerson

  408. Language is not neutral. It is not merely a vehicle which carries ideas. It is itself a shaper of ideas.

    Dale Spender, (1943- )

  409. Last week, I went to Philadelphia, but it was closed.

    W. C. Fields

  410. Laws are like sausages, it is better not to see them being made.

    Otto von Bismarck

  411. Laws are the spider's webs which, if anything small falls into them they ensnare it, but large things break through and escape.

    Solon, (c. 638 - c. 558 BCE)

  412. Laws, like the spider's web, catch the fly and let the hawk go free.

    Spanish Proverb

  413. Leadership is a potent combination of strategy and character. But if you must be without one, be without the strategy.

    General Norman Schwarzkopf

  414. Leadership is getting someone to do what they don't want to do in order to achieve what they want to achieve.

    Tom Landry

  415. Learning is acquired by reading books; but the much more necessary learning, the knowledge of the world, is only to be acquired by reading man, and studying all the various editions of them.

    Philip Dormer Stanhope, statesman and writer (1694-1773)

  416. Let him that would move the world, first move himself.

    Socrates

  417. Let proportion be found not only in numbers and measures, but also in sounds, weights, times, and positions, and what ever force there is.

    Leonardo Da Vinci, (1452-1519)

  418. Let the gods avenge themselves.

    Roman law maxim, on blasphemy

  419. Let us live to prove that we can cultivate the natural world that is about us, and the intellectual and moral world that is within us, so that we may secure an individual, social and political prosperity, whose course shall be forward, and which, while the earth endures, shall not pass away.

    Abraham Lincoln, February 11, 1861

  420. Let us read and let us dance — two amusements that will never do any harm to the world.

    Voltaire

  421. Let us so live that when we come to die even the undertaker will be sorry.

    Mark Twain, (1835-1910)

  422. Let us train our minds to desire what the situation demands.

    Seneca

  423. Liberal education is the pursuit of human excellence, not the pursuit of excellent salaries and excellent forms of polish and sophistication. Liberal education is not even about excellent intellectual achievements. Its goal is more ethical than intellectual: It focuses on the development of individuals as moral agents, and it teaches students how to reflect both analytically and evaluatively on the fact that the choices we make turn us into the persons we become.

    Marshall Gregory

  424. Liberty is the possibility of doubting, the possibility of making a mistake, the possibility of searching and experimenting, the possibility of saying No to any authority — literary, artistic, philosophic, religious, social, and even political.

    Ignazio Silone, author (1900-1978)

  425. Life is pleasant. Death is peaceful. It's the transition that's troublesome.

    Isaac Asimov, (1920-1992)

  426. Life is too short to be kissing frogs, much less to be kissing the asses of frogs.

    G.E. Nordell

  427. Life without industry is guilt, industry without art is brutality.

    John Ruskin, (1819-1900)

  428. Listen or thy tongue will keep thee deaf.

    American Indian Proverb

  429. Little strokes, fell great oaks.

    Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)

  430. Live in such a way that you would not be ashamed to sell your parrot to the town gossip.

    Will Rogers

  431. Look into any man's heart you please, and you will always find, in every one, at least one black spot which he has to keep concealed.

    Henrik Ibsen, playwright (1828-1906)

  432. Lots of folks confuse bad management with destiny.

    Kin Hubbard

  433. Love all, trust a few, do wrong to none.

    Shakespeare, (1564-1616)

  434. Love does not consist in gazing at each other, but in looking outward together in the same direction.

    Antoine de Saint-Exupery

  435. Love is like war; easy to begin but very hard to stop.

    H. L. Mencken, (1880-1956)

  436. Love your enemies. It will make them crazy.

    Anonymous

  437. Majority rule only works if you're also considering individual rights. Because you can't have five wolves and one sheep voting on what to have for supper.

    Larry Flynt

  438. Make things as simple as possible, but not simpler.

    Albert Einstein (1879-1955)

  439. Making the decision to have a child is momentous — it is to decide forever to have your heart go walking around outside your body.

    Elizabeth Stone

  440. Man had always assumed that he was more intelligent than dolphins because he had achieved so much... the wheel, New York, wars, and so on, whilst all the dolphins had ever done was muck about in the water having a good time. But conversely the dolphins believed themselves to be more intelligent than man for precisely the same reasons.

    Douglas Adams

  441. Man is an intelligence in servitude to his organs.

    Aldous Huxley

  442. Man is born to live, not to prepare to live.

    Boris Pasternak

  443. Man is not a creature of circumstances. Circumstances are creatures of men.

    Benjamin Disraeli

  444. Man is the best computer we can put aboard a spacecraft and the only one that can be mass produced with unskilled labor.

    Wernher von Braun, (1912-1977)

  445. Management is doing things right; leadership is doing the right things.

    Peter F. Drucker

  446. Many a man's reputation would not know his character if they met on the street.

    Elbert Hubbard

  447. Many a man's tongue broke his nose.

    Seamas MacManus

  448. Many men go fishing all of their lives without knowing that it is not fish they are after.

    Henry David Thoreau

  449. Many people hear voices when no-one is there. Some of them are called mad and are shut up in rooms where they stare at the walls all day. Others are called writers and they do pretty much the same thing.

    Margaret Chittenden

  450. Many people need desperately to receive this message: "I feel and think much as you do, care about many of the things you care about, although most people don't care about them. You are not alone."

    Kurt Vonnegut

  451. Marriage is a great institution, but I'm not ready for an institution yet.

    Mae West

  452. Mathematics is the language with which God has written the universe.

    Galileo Galilei, (1564-1642)

  453. May you live in interesting times.

    Ancient Chinese Curse

  454. Maybe this world is another planet's Hell.

    Aldous Huxley, (1894-1963)

  455. Men are men before they are lawyers, or physicians, or merchants, or manufacturers; and if you make them capable and sensible men, they will make themselves capable and sensible lawyers or physicians.

    John Stuart Mill, (1806-1873)

  456. Men build too many walls and not enough bridges.

    Isaac Newton, philosopher and mathematician (1642-1727)

  457. Men have become the tools of their tools.

    Henry David Thoreau, (1817-1862)

  458. Men love to wonder, and that is the seed of science.

    Ralph Waldo Emerson

  459. Men never do evil so completely and cheerfully as when they do it from religious conviction.

    Blaise Pascal, (1623-1662)

  460. Men seek out retreats for themselves in the country, by the seaside, on the mountains... But all this is unphilosophical to the last degree... when thou canst at a moment's notice retire into thyself.

    Marcus Aelius Aurelius

  461. Millions long for immortality who do not know what to do with themselves on a rainy Sunday afternoon.

    Susan Ertz, author (1894-1985)

  462. Minds, like bodies, will often fall into a pimpled, ill-conditioned state from mere excess of comfort.

    Charles Dickens, (1812-1870)

  463. Modern man thinks he loses something — time — when he does not do things quickly. Yet he does not know what to do with the time he gains — except kill it.

    Erich Fromm

  464. Modes of production establish constraints with which humanity must come to terms, and the constraints of the industrial mode of production are peculiarly demanding...Industrial production...confronts men with machines that embody "imperatives" if they are to be used at all, and these imperatives lead easily to the organization of work, of life, even of thought, in ways that accommodate men to machines rather than the much more difficult alternative.

    Robert Heilbroner, The Human Prospect

  465. Moral certainty is always a sign of cultural inferiority. The more uncivilized the man, the surer he is that he knows precisely what is right and what is wrong. All human progress, even in morals, has been the work of men who have doubted the current moral values, not of men who have whooped them up and tried to enforce them. The truly civilized man is always skeptical and tolerant, in this field as in all others. His culture is based on "I am not too sure."

    H. L. Mencken

  466. More die in the United States of too much food than of too little.

    John Kenneth Galbraith, (1908- )

  467. More than any other time in history, mankind now faces a crossroads. One path leads to despair and utter hopelessness. The other, to total extinction. Let us pray we have the wisdom to choose correctly.

    Woody Allen

  468. Most of our so-called reasoning consists in finding arguments for going on believing as we already do.

    James Harvey Robinson

  469. Most of us are just about as happy as we make up our minds to be.

    Abraham Lincoln (1809-65)

  470. Most truths are so naked that people feel sorry for them and cover them up, at least a little bit.

    Edward R. Murrow, (1908-1965)

  471. Mothers all want their sons to grow up to be president but they don't want them to become politicians in the process.

    John F. Kennedy

  472. Mountaintops inspire leaders but valleys mature them.

    Winston Churchill

  473. My aim is to agitate and disturb people. I'm not selling bread, I'm selling yeast.

    Miguel de Unamuno, (1864-1936)

  474. My grandfather once told me that there were two kinds of people: those who do the work and those who take the credit. He told me to try to be in the first group; there was much less competition.

    Indira Gandhi

  475. My greatest skill has been to want but little.

    Henry David Thoreau, (1817-1862)

  476. My kind of loyalty was loyalty to one's country, not to its institutions or its officeholders.

    Mark Twain, (1835-1910)

  477. Nature does nothing uselessly.

    Aristotle (384-322 BCE)

  478. Nature is ever at work building and pulling down, creating and destroying, keeping everything whirling and flowing, allowing no rest but in rhythmical motion, chasing everything in endless song out of one beautiful form into another.

    John Muir, Naturalist and explorer (1838-1914)

  479. Nature is trying very hard to make us succeed, but nature does not depend on us. We are not the only experiment.

    R. Buckminster Fuller, (1895-1983)

  480. Nature uses as little as possible of anything.

    Johannes Kepler, (1571-1630)

  481. Nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you want to test a man's character, give him power.

    Abraham Lincoln

  482. Nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you want to test a man's character, give him power.

    Abraham Lincoln, (1809-1865)

  483. Necessity has been with great truth called the mother of invention. Some of the noblest exertions of the human mind have been set in motion by the necessity of satisfying the wants of the body.

    T. Robert Malthus, 1798

  484. Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.

    William Pitt, (1759-1806)

  485. Neither a man nor a crowd nor a nation can be trusted to act humanely or to think sanely under the influence of a great fear.

    Bertrand Russell, (1872-1970)

  486. Neither a man nor a crowd nor a nation can be trusted to act humanely or to think sanely under the influence of a great fear.

    Bertrand Russell, philosopher, mathematician, author, Nobel laureate (1872-1970)

  487. Neurotics build castles in the air; psychotics live in them.

    Anonymous

  488. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.

    Elie Wiesel, (b. 1928)

  489. Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity.

    Hanlon's Razor

  490. Never attribute to malice what can be adequately explained by stupidity.

    Anonymous

  491. Never believe anything in politics until it has been officially denied.

    Otto von Bismarck

  492. Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.

    Margaret Mead

  493. Never explain — your friends don't need it, and your enemies won't believe you anyhow.

    Elbert Hubbard

  494. Never lend books — nobody ever returns them; the only books I have in my library are those which people have lent me.

    Anatole France, (1844-1924)

  495. Never let your sense of morals get in the way of doing what's right.

    Isaac Asimov, (1920-1992)

  496. Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what's right.

    Isaac Asimov

  497. Never look down on anybody unless you're helping him up.

    Jesse Louis Jackson

  498. Never mistake knowledge for wisdom. One helps you make a living; the other helps you make a life.

    Sandra Carey

  499. Never trust the artist. Trust the tale.

    D.H. Lawrence

  500. Never, never be afraid to do what's right, especially if the well-being of a person or animal is at stake. Society's punishments are small compared to the wounds we inflict on our soul when we look the other way.

    Martin Luther King Jr., civil-rights leader (1929-1968)

  501. Night fell again. There was war to the south, but our sector was quiet. The battle was over. Our casualties were some thirteen thousand killed ― thirteen thousand minds, memories, loves, sensations, worlds, universes ― because the human mind is more a universe than the universe itself ― and all for a few hundred yards of useless mud.

    John Fowles [The Magus, 1965]

  502. Ninety percent of the politicians give the other ten percent a bad reputation.

    Henry Kissinger

  503. No amount of experimentation can ever prove me right; a single experiment can prove me wrong.

    Albert Einstein (1879-1955)

  504. No machinery in the world functions so precisely as this apparatus of men and, moreover, so cheaply. . .. Rational calculation . . . reduces every worker to a cog in this bureaucratic machine and, seeing himself in this light, he will merely ask how to transform himself into a somewhat bigger cog. . . . The passion for bureaucratization drives us to despair.

    Max Weber, 1921

  505. No man ever steps in the same river twice, for it's not the same river and he's not the same man.

    Heraclitus, (c. 540-470 BCE)

  506. No man is an island, entire of itself; every man is a piece of the continent.

  507. — John Donne

  508. No man is justified in doing evil on the ground of expediency.

    Franklin D. Roosevelt

  509. No man, for any considerable period, can wear one face to himself, and another to the multitude, without finally getting bewildered as to which may be true.

    Nathaniel Hawthorne, (1804-1864)

  510. No matter how far you've gone down the wrong road, turn back.

    Turkish proverb

  511. No mistake is more common and more fatuous than appealing to logic in cases which are beyond her jurisdiction.

    Samuel Butler, (1835-1902)

  512. No one has ever become poor by giving.

    Anne Frank, (1929-1945)

  513. No one knows who will live in this cage in the future, or whether at the end of this tremendous development entirely new prophets will arise, or there will be a great rebirth of old ideas and ideals or, if neither, mechanized petrification embellished with a sort of convulsive self-importance. For of the last stage of this cultural development, it might well be truly said: "Specialists without spirit, sensualists without heart; this nullity imagines that it has obtained a level of civilization never before achieved."

    Max Weber, 1904

  514. No people can be both ignorant and free.

    Thomas Jefferson

  515. No protracted war can fail to endanger the freedom of a democratic country.

    Alexis de Tocqueville, (1805-1859)

  516. No science is immune to the infection of politics and the corruption of power.

    Jacob Bronowski

  517. No two people see the external world in exactly the same way. To every separate person a thing is what he thinks it is — in other words, not a thing, but a think.

    Penelope Fitzgerald, British author

  518. No witchcraft, no enemy action had silenced the rebirth of new life in this stricken world. The people had done it themselves.

    Rachel Carson

  519. No wonder nobody comes here― it's too crowded.

    Yogi Berra

  520. No, no, you're not thinking, you're just being logical.

    Niels Bohr, physicist (1885-1962)

  521. Nobody in the game of football should be called a genius. A genius is somebody like Norman Einstein.

    Joe Theisman, former quarterback

  522. Nodding the head does not row the boat.

    Irish Proverb

  523. Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted.

    Albert Einstein (1879-1955)

  524. Not only does the English Language borrow words from other languages, it sometimes chases them down dark alleys, hits them over the head, and goes through their pockets.

    James Nicoll

  525. Not the cry, but the flight of the wild duck, leads the flock to fly and follow.

    Anonymous

  526. Nothing doth more hurt in a state than that cunning men pass for wise.

    Francis Bacon, (1561-1626)

  527. Nothing in life is to be feared, it is only to be understood.

    Marie Curie

  528. Nothing is more humbling than to look with a strong magnifying glass at an insect so tiny that the naked eye sees only the barest speck and to discover that nevertheless it is sculpted and articulated and striped with the same care and imagination as a zebra. Apparently it does not occur to nature whether or not a creature is within our range of vision, and the suspicion arises that even the zebra was not designed for our benefit.

    Rudolf Arnheim, (1904-2007)

  529. Nothing that grieves us can be called little: by the eternal laws of proportion a child's loss of a doll and a king's loss of a crown are events of the same size.

    Mark Twain, (1835-1910)

  530. Nothing worse could happen to one than to be completely understood.

    Carl Gustav Jung, (1875-1961)

  531. O wad some Power the giftie gie us / To see oursels as ithers see us!

    Robert Burns, (1759-1796)

  532. Often you must turn your stylus to erase, if you hope to write anything worth a second reading.

    Horace, poet and satirist (65-8 BCE)

  533. Oftentimes excusing of a fault / Doth make the fault the worse by th' excuse.

    William Shakespeare, (1564-1616)

  534. Oh would some power the gift give us, to see ourselves as others see us.

    Robert Burns, (1759-1796)

  535. Oh, how small a portion of earth will hold us when we are dead, who ambitiously seek after the whole world while we are living!

    Philip of Macedon, father of Alexander the Great (382-336 BCE)

  536. Omit needless words. Vigorous writing is concise. A sentence should contain no unnecessary words, a paragraph no unnecessary sentences, for the same reason that a drawing should have no unnecessary lines and a machine no unnecessary parts.

    William Strunk, Jr., (1869-1946)

  537. On the Internet, nobody knows you're a dog.

    Cartoon in The New Yorker

  538. Once we assuage our conscience by calling something a "necessary evil", it begins to look more and more necessary and less and less evil.

    Sydney J. Harris, journalist (1917-1986)

  539. Once you label me you negate me.

    Soren Kierkegaard, (1813-1855)

  540. Once, the governing human metaphor was pastoral or agricultural, and it clarified, and so preserved in human care, the natural cycles of birth, growth, death, and decay. But modern humanity's governing metaphor is that of the machine. Having placed ourselves in charge of creation, we began to mechanize both the creation itself and our conception of it. We began to see the whole creation merely as raw material, to be transformed by machines into a manufactured Paradise.

    Wendell Berry, The Unsettling of America

  541. One can be instructed in society, one is inspired only in solitude.

    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, (1749-1832)

  542. One cannot do right in one department of life whilst he is occupied in doing wrong in any other department. Life is one indivisible whole.

    Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (1869-1948)

  543. One capitalist always kills many.

    Karl Marx, 1867

  544. One glance at a book and you hear the voice of another person, perhaps someone dead for 1,000 years. To read is to voyage through time.

    Carl Sagan, (1934-1996)

  545. One need not argue a full-blooded materialist position to say that it is capitalism that has given the general character to modern liberal societies. It is capitalist institutions and values― private property, profit-seeking, individualism, consumerism― that color the attitudes and beliefs of the majority of the populations of modern societies.

    Krishan Kumar

  546. One need not have been Caesar in order to understand Caesar.

    Max Weber, (1978: 5)

  547. One of the best ways to get yourself a reputation as a dangerous citizen these days is to go about repeating the very phrases which our founding fathers used in the great struggle for independence.

    Charles A. Beard, historian (1874-1948)

  548. One of the hardest things in life is having words in your heart that you can't utter.

    James Earl Jones, (1931- )

  549. One of the indictments of civilizations is that happiness and intelligence are so rarely found in the same person.

    William Feather, (1889-1981)

  550. One of the keys to happiness is a bad memory.

    Rita Mae Brown, (1944- )

  551. One of the penalties for refusing to participate in politics is that you end up being governed by your inferiors.

    Plato

  552. One who condones evils is just as guilty as the one who perpetrates it.

    Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., (1929-1968)

  553. Only the educated are free.

    Epictetus

  554. Only the educated are free.

    Epictetus, philosopher (c. 60-120)

  555. Only the guy who isn't rowing has time to rock the boat. — Jean

    Paul Sartre

  556. Only the madman is absolutely sure.

    Robert Anton Wilson, novelist (1932-2007)

  557. Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former.

    Albert Einstein

  558. Our Constitution was not written in the sands to be washed away by each wave of new judges blown in by each successive political wind.

    Hugo L. Black

  559. Our chief want is someone who will inspire us to be what we know we could be.

    Ralph Waldo Emerson

  560. Our country, right or wrong. When right, to be kept right; when wrong, to be put right.

    Carl Schurz, revolutionary, statesman and reformer (1829-1906)

  561. Our deeds determine us, as much as we determine our deeds.

    George Eliot (Mary Ann Evans), novelist (1819-1880)

  562. Our greatest glory is not in never falling, but in rising every time we fall.

    Confucius

  563. Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.

    Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

  564. Our plans miscarry because they have no aim. When a man does not know what harbor he is making for, no wind is the right wind.

    Seneca

  565. Our sun is one of 100 billion stars in our galaxy. Our galaxy is one of the billions of galaxies populating the universe. It would be the height of presumption to think that we are the only living things within that enormous immensity.

    Wernher von Braun, rocket engineer (1912-1977)

  566. Our task must be to free ourselves...by widening our circle of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature and its beauty.

    Albert Einstein (1879-1955)

  567. Paranoia runs deep.

    Buffalo Springfield

  568. Patience has its limits. Take it too far, and it's cowardice

    George Jackson

  569. Patience is also a form of action.

    Auguste Rodin, (1840-1917)

  570. Patriotism is the willingness to kill and be killed for trivial reasons.

    Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)

  571. Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all others because you were born in it.

    George Bernard Shaw, writer, Nobel laureate (1856-1950)

  572. People are trapped in history and history is trapped in them.

    James A. Baldwin

  573. People at present think that five sons are not too many and each son also has five sons...Therefore people are more and wealth is less; they work hard and receive little.

    Han Fei-Tzu, 500 B.C.

  574. People demand freedom of speech as a compensation for the freedom of thought which they seldom use.

    Kierkegaard

  575. People like to imagine that because all our mechanical equipment moves so much faster, that we are thinking faster, too.

    Christopher Morley, (1890-1957)

  576. People never lie so much as before an election, during a war, or after a hunt.

    Otto von Bismarck, (1815-1898)

  577. People only see what they are prepared to see.

    Ralph Waldo Emerson

  578. People rarely win wars; governments rarely lose them.

    Arundhati Roy, (1961- )

  579. People who are willing to give up freedom for the sake of short term security, deserve neither freedom nor security.

    Benjamin Franklin, (1706-1790)

  580. Perfection is attained by slow degrees; it requires the hand of time.

    Voltaire, philosopher (1694-1778)

  581. Perhaps the greatest social service that can be rendered by anybody to the country and to mankind is to bring up a family.

    George Bernard Shaw, (1856-1950)

  582. Permanent good can never be the outcome of untruth and violence.

    Mahatma Gandhi (1869-1948)

  583. Permit me to issue and control the money of a nation, and I care not who makes its laws.

    Amschel Mayer Rothschild, (1743-1812)

  584. Persistent people begin their success where others end in failures.

    Edward Eggleston

  585. Peter Principle: an employee within an organization will advance to his or her level of incompetence and remain there.

    Laurence Johnston Peter (1919-1990)

  586. Pick battles big enough to matter, small enough to win.

    Jonathan Kozol

  587. Poetry is truth in its Sunday clothes.

    Joseph Roux, (1834-1886)

  588. Politeness is to human nature what warmth is to wax.

    Arthur Schopenhauer, (1788-1860)

  589. Political freedom cannot exist in any land where religion controls the state, and religious freedom cannot exist in any land where the state controls religion.

    Sam Ervin, (1896-1985)

  590. Political history is largely an account of mass violence and of the expenditure of vast resources to cope with mythical fears and hopes.

    Murray Edelman, professor (1919-2001)

  591. Politicians neither love nor hate. Interest, not sentiment, directs them.

    Lord Chesterfield

  592. Politics as battle has given way to politics as spectacle.

    Ronald Steel

  593. Politics is a strife of interests masquerading as a contest of principles.

    Ambrose Bierce

  594. Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it, misdiagnosing it, and then misapplying the wrong remedies.

    Groucho Marx

  595. Politics is the gentle art of getting votes from the poor and campaign funds from the rich, by promising to protect each from the other.

    Oscar Ameringer

  596. Power always thinks it has a great soul and vast views beyond the comprehension of the weak; and that it is doing God's service when it is violating all his laws.

    John Adams, (1735-1826)

  597. Power does not corrupt. Fear corrupts... perhaps the fear of a loss of power.

    John Steinbeck

  598. Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.

    Lord Acton (John Emerich Edward Dalberg-Acton), historian (1834-1902)

  599. President Bush has said that he does not need approval from the UN to wage war, and I'm thinking, well, hell, he didn't need the approval of the American voters to become president either.

    David Letterman

  600. President means chief servant.

    Mahatma Gandhi

  601. Problems are only opportunities in work clothes.

    Henry J. Kaiser

  602. Put not your trust in princes

    Lord Stafford, 1641

  603. Question with boldness even the existence of a God; because, if there be one, he must more approve of the homage of reason, then that of blindfolded fear.

    Thomas Jefferson, (1743-1826)

  604. Questions show the mind's range, and answers its subtlety.

    Joseph Joubert, (1754-1824)

  605. Rain! whose soft architectural hands have power to cut stones, and chisel to shapes of grandeur the very mountains.

    Henry Ward Beecher, preacher and writer (1813-1887)

  606. Reading is seeing by proxy.

    Herbert Spencer, (1820-1903)

  607. Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body.

    Joseph Addison, (1672-1719)

  608. Real knowledge is to know the extent of one's ignorance.

    Confucius, (c. 551-478 BCE)

  609. Reality is just a crutch for people who can't cope with drugs.

    Robin Williams

  610. Religion― freedom― vengeance― what you will, A word's enough to raise mankind to kill.

    Lord Byron, (1788-1824)

  611. Relying on the government to protect your privacy is like asking a peeping tom to install your window blinds.

    John Perry Barlow

  612. Remember that there is nothing stable in human affairs; therefore avoid undue elation in prosperity, or undue depression in adversity.

    Socrates, (469? - 399 BCE)

  613. Remember the difference between a boss and a leader; a boss says, "Go!" A leader says, "Let"s go!"

    E. M. Kelly

  614. Research is formalized curiosity. It is poking and prying with a purpose.

    Zora Neale Hurston

  615. Restlessness and discontent are the first necessities of progress.

    Thomas A. Edison

  616. Say not, "I have found the truth," but rather, "I have found a truth."

    Kahlil Gibran (1883-1931)

  617. Science has proof without any certainty. Creationists have certainty without any proof.

    Ashley Montagu

  618. Science is a way of thinking much more than it is a body of knowledge.

    Carl Sagan (1934-1996)

  619. Science is facts; just as houses are made of stones, so is science made of facts; but a pile of stones is not a house and a collection of facts is not necessarily science.

    Henri Poincare

  620. Science is nothing but perception.

    Plato

  621. Science is organized knowledge. Wisdom is organized life.

    Immanuel Kant

  622. Science is simply common sense at its best, that is, rigidly accurate in observation, and merciless to fallacy in logic.

    Thomas H. Huxley

  623. Science is the refusal to believe on the basis of hope.

    Carrie P. Snow

  624. Science is the tool of the Western mind and with it more doors can be opened than with bare hands. It is part and parcel of our knowledge and obscures our insight only when it holds that the understanding given by it is the only kind there is.

    C. G. Jung (1875-1961)

  625. Science may have found a cure for most evils; but it has found no remedy for the worst of them all — the apathy of human beings.

    Helen Keller

  626. Secrecy, being an instrument of conspiracy, ought never to be the system of a regular government.

    Jeremy Bentham, jurist and philosopher (1748-1832)

  627. Seven blunders of the world that lead to violence: wealth without work, pleasure without conscience, knowledge without character, commerce without morality, science without humanity, worship without sacrifice, politics without principle.

    Mahatma Gandhi (1869-1948)

  628. Shadow owes its birth to light.

    John Gay, (1685-1732)

  629. Ships that pass in the night and speak each other in passing; Only a signal shown and a distant voice in the darkness; So on the ocean of life we pass and speak one another, Only a look and a voice; then darkness again and a silence.

    Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, (1807-1882)

  630. Silence will save me from being wrong (and foolish), but it will also deprive me of the possibility of being right.

    Igor Stravinsky, (1882-1971)

  631. Since Auschwitz we know what man is capable of. And since Hiroshima we know what is at stake.

    Viktor Frankl, (1905-1997)

  632. Since we cannot know all that there is to be known about anything, we ought to know a little about everything.

    Blaise Pascal

  633. Since when do we have to agree with people to defend them from injustice?

    Lillian Hellman, (1905-1984)

  634. So much of what we call management consists in making it difficult for people to work.

    Peter Drucker

  635. Social research of any kind is advanced by ideas, it is only disciplined by fact.

    C. Wright Mills, The Sociological Imagination, 1959

  636. Society is like a stew. If you don't keep it stirred up you get a lot of scum on the top.

    Edward Abbey, (1927-1989)

  637. Society prepares the crime; the criminal commits it.

    Henry Thomas Buckle, historian (1821-1862)

  638. Some cause happiness wherever they go; others whenever they go.

    Oscar Wilde

  639. Some of the worst actors on the international stage can also take advantage of the collective exhaustion and outrage that people feel with official corruption, as we've seen with Islamic extremists who promise purification, but deliver totalitarianism. Endemic corruption opens the door to this kind of movement, and in its wake comes a new set of distortions and betrayals of public trust.

    Barack Obama, Speech at the University of Nairobi, Kenya; Aug 28, 2006.

  640. Some painters transform the sun into a yellow spot; others transform a yellow spot into the sun.

    Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)

  641. Some people change when they see the light, others when they feel the heat.

    Caroline Schoeder

  642. Some people talk in their sleep. Lecturers talk while other people sleep.

    Albert Camus

  643. Some people with great virtues are disagreeable, while others with great vices are delightful.

    Francois, duc de La Rochefoucauld, moralist (1613-1680)

  644. Sometimes I think the surest sign that intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe is that none of it has tried to contact us.

    Bill Watterson

  645. Sometimes I think we're alone in the universe, and sometimes I think we're not. In either case, the idea is quite staggering.

    Arthur C Clarke, (1917- )

  646. Sometimes I wonder whether the world is being run by smart people who are putting us on or by imbeciles who really mean it.

    Mark Twain, (1835-1910)

  647. Sometimes it's a little better to travel than to arrive.

    Robert Pirsig

  648. Sometimes the road less traveled is less traveled for a reason

    Jerry Seinfield

  649. Sometimes to remain silent is to lie.

    Miguel de Unamuno, philosopher (1864-1936)

  650. Sometimes you can observe a lot by watching.

    Yogi Berra

  651. Speech is conveniently located midway between thought and action, where it often substitutes for both.

    John Andrew Holmes

  652. Start every day off with a smile and get it over with.

    W. C. Fields

  653. Stocks have reached what looks like a permanently high plateau.

    Irving Fisher, Professor of Economics, Yale University,1929

  654. Study history, study history. In history lies all the secrets of statecraft.

    Winston Churchill

  655. Substitute damn every time you're inclined to write very; your editor will delete it and the writing will be just as it should be.

    Mark Twain, (1835-1910)

  656. Talent develops in tranquility, character in the full current of human life.

    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)

  657. Technological progress is like an axe in the hands of a pathological criminal.

    Albert Einstein

  658. Technology...the knack of so arranging the world that we don't have to experience it.

    Max Frisch

  659. That government is best which governs least.

    Thomas Paine

  660. That population cannot increase without the means of subsistence is a proposition so evident that it needs no illustration. That population does invariably increase where there are the means of subsistence, the history of every people that have ever existed will abundantly prove. And that the superior power of population cannot be checked without producing misery or vice, the ample portion of these too bitter ingredients in the cup of human life and the continuance of the physical causes that seem to have produced them bear too convincing a testimony.

    T. Robert Malthus, 1798

  661. That wretched alchemist called money can turn a man's heart into a stone!

    Mehmet Murat Ildan, (1965- )

  662. The 1st Amendment protects the right to speak, not the right to spend.

    Byron R. White

  663. The abdomen is the reason why man does not easily take himself for a god.

    Friedrich Nietzsche

  664. The ability to piece together work that will both satisfy and support us is the secret to surviving, even thriving.

    Wendy Reid Crisp

  665. The accumulation of gadgets hides these meanings: those who use these devices do not understand them; those who invent them do not understand much else.

    C. Wright Mills

  666. The actions of men are the best interpreters of their thoughts.

    John Locke

  667. The actions of men are the best interpreters of their thoughts.

    John Locke, philosopher (1632-1704)

  668. The art of medicine consists in amusing the patient while nature cures the disease.

    Voltaire (1694-1778)

  669. The art of prophecy is very difficult — especially with respect to the future.

    Mark Twain, (1835-1910)

  670. The bamboo that bends is stronger than the oak that resists.

    Japanese proverb

  671. The barriers are not erected which can say to aspiring talents and industry, "Thus far and no farther."

    Ludwig van Beethoven, (1770-1827)

  672. The best form of government is that which is most likely to prevent the greatest sum of evil.

    James Monroe

  673. The best lack all conviction, while the worst Are full of passionate intensity.

    William Butler Yeats [The Second Coming]

  674. The best thing about the future is that it comes only one day at a time.

    Abraham Lincoln

  675. The best way to have a good idea is to have a lot of ideas.

    Linus Pauling

  676. The best way to have a good idea is to have lots of ideas.

    Linus Pauling

  677. The best writing is rewriting.

    E. B. White, (1899-1985)

  678. The big thieves hang the little ones.

    Czech proverb

  679. The capacity to be puzzled is the premise of all creation, be it in art or in science.

    Erich Fromm

  680. The charm of history and its enigmatic lesson consist in the fact that, from age to age, nothing changes and yet everything is completely different.

    Aldous Huxley

  681. The computer is a moron.

    Peter F. Drucker

  682. The concept of culture I espouse, is essentially a semiotic one. Believing, with Max Weber, that man is an animal suspended in webs of significance he himself has spun, I take culture to be those webs, and the analysis of it to be therefore not an experimental science in search of law but an interpretative one in search of a meaning.

    Clifford Geertz

  683. The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.

    Ralph Waldo Emerson, (1803-1882)

  684. The cruelest lies are often told in silence.

    Robert Louis Stevenson

  685. The days of the digital watch are numbered.

    Tom Stoppard

  686. The death of democracy is not likely to be an assassination from ambush. It will be a slow extinction from apathy, indifference, and undernourishment.

    Robert Maynard Hutchins, educator (1899-1977)

  687. The decisive reason for the advance of bureaucratic organization has always been its purely technical superiority over any other kind of organization. The fully developed bureaucratic mechanism compares with other organizations exactly as does the machine with the non-mechanical modes of organization.

    Max Weber

  688. The degree of civilization in a society can be judged by entering its prisons.

    Fyodor Dostoyevsky, (1821-1881)

  689. The devil can cite Scripture for his purpose.

    William Shakespeare, (1564-1616)

  690. The difference between false memories and true ones is the same as for jewels: it is always the false ones that look the most real, the most brilliant.

    Salvador Dali

  691. The difference between genius and stupidity is; genius has its limits.

    Albert Einstein

  692. The difference between perseverance and obstinacy is that one comes from a strong will, and the other from a strong won't.

    Henry Ward Beecher

  693. The difference between the right word and the almost-right word is like the difference between lightning and the lightning bug.

    Mark Twain

  694. The difference in mind between man and the higher animals, great as it is, certainly is one of degree and not of kind.

    Charles Darwin, (1809-1882) [The Descent of Man]

  695. The direct use of force is such a poor solution to any problem, it is generally employed only by small children and large nations.

    David Friedman

  696. The end of the human race will be that it will eventually die of civilization.

    Ralph Waldo Emerson, (1803-1882)

  697. The enemy is anybody who's going to get you killed, no matter which side he's on.

    Joseph Heller, (1923-1999)

  698. The essential ingredient of politics is timing.

    Pierre Elliott Trudeau

  699. The exploitive mind characteristically puts itself in charge of the future. The future is a time that cannot conceivably be reached except by industrial progress and economic growth.

    Wendell Berry, The Unsettling of America

  700. The fact that a believer is happier than a skeptic is no more to the point than the fact than a drunken man is happier than a sober one.

    George Bernard Shaw, (1856-1950)

  701. The fact that an opinion has been widely held is no evidence whatever that it is not utterly absurd.

    Bertrand Russell, (1872-1970)

  702. The family is the nucleus of civilization.

    Will Durant

  703. The fate of animals is of greater importance to me than the fear of appearing ridiculous; it is indissolubly connected with the fate of men.

    Emile Zola

  704. The fetters imposed on liberty at home have ever been forged out of the weapons provided for defense against real, pretended, or imaginary dangers from abroad.

    James Madison, (1751-1836)

  705. The fewer the facts, the stronger the opinion.

    Arnold H. Glasow

  706. The first duty of a revolutionary is to get away with it.

    Abbie Hoffman

  707. The first forty years of life give us the text; the next thirty supply the commentary on it.

    Arthur Schopenhauer, (1788-1860)

  708. The first great awakeners of the mind seem to be the wants of the body. They are the first stimulants that rouse the brain of infant man into sentient activity, and such seems to be the sluggishness of original matter that unless by a peculiar course of excitements other wants, equally powerful, are generated, these stimulants seem, even afterwards, to be necessary to continue that activity which they first awakened.

    T. Robert Malthus, 1798

  709. The first human who hurled an insult instead of a stone was the founder of civilization.

    Sigmund Freud, (1856-1939)

  710. The first method for estimating the intelligence of a ruler is to look at the men he has around him.

    Niccolo Machiavelli

  711. The flood of money that gushes into politics today is a pollution of democracy.

    Theodore H. White

  712. The foolish and the dead alone never change their opinions.

    James Russell Lowell, (1819-1891)

  713. The forces that affect our lives, the influences that mold and shape us, are often like whispers in a distant room, teasingly indistinct, apprehended only with difficulty.

    Charles Dickens

  714. The free-lance writer is the person who is paid per piece or per word or perhaps.

    Robert Benchley

  715. The function of wisdom is to discriminate between good and evil.

    Unknown

  716. The future is history.

    Twelve Monkeys

  717. The gem cannot be polished without friction, nor man perfected without trials.

    Chinese Proverb

  718. The grand aim of all science is to cover the greatest number of empirical facts by logical deduction from the smallest number of hypotheses or axioms.

    Albert Einstein

  719. The great tragedy of science― the slaying of a beautiful hypothesis by an ugly fact.

    Thomas Huxley, (1825-1895)

  720. The greatest of faults, I should say, is to be conscious of none.

    Thomas Carlyle, (1795-1881)

  721. The greatest part of a writer's time is spent in reading, in order to write; a man will turn over half a library to make one book.

    Samuel Johnson, (1709-1784)

  722. The greatest task before civilization at present is to make machines what they ought to be, the slaves, instead of the masters of men.

    Henry Havelock Ellis

  723. The greatness of a nation can be judged by the way its animals are treated.

    Mahatma Gandhi (1869-1948)

  724. The heart has its reasons that the mind knows nothing of.

    Blaise Pascal

  725. The highest justification of liberal education is that, by forming free and well-furnished minds, it prepares students to fashion for themselves a good life.

    John Stewart Mill, (1806-1873)

  726. The highest reward for a man's toil is not what he gets for it but what he becomes by it.

    John Ruskin

  727. The historical past has a persistent and penetrating influence upon the behavior and ideas of any generation...If we would diagnose our own age we had better do so historically, for history is the essence of human culture and thought.

    Robert A. Nisbet

  728. The hottest places in hell are reserved for those who, in time of great moral crisis, maintain their neutrality.

    Dante Alighieri, (1265-1321)

  729. The human race has one really effective weapon, and that is laughter.

    Mark Twain, (1835-1910)

  730. The idea that is not dangerous is not worthy of being called an idea at all.

    Elbert Hubbard

  731. The ideals which have lighted my way, and time after time have given me new courage to face life cheerfully, have been Kindness, Beauty, and Truth.

    Albert Einstein (1879-1955)

  732. The important fact of the present time is not the struggle between capitalism and socialism but the struggle between industrial civilization and humanity.

    Bertrand Russell, (1872-1970)

  733. The innocent and the beautiful have no enemy but time.

    William Butler Yeats, (1865-1939)

  734. The interests of an economically dominant class never stand naked. They are enshrouded in the flag, fortified by the law, protected by the police, nurtured by the media, taught by the schools, and blessed by the church.

    Michael Parenti, 1978

  735. The job is not to see where "Marx was wrong" so much as to make a fresh application of his theory to the world around us as it is, not as it once was. To borrow a comparison from the field of physics, we need socialist Faradays and Maxwells or if we are lucky, Einsteins and Plancks, not people who confine themselves to knocking Isaac Newton.

    Harry Braverman, (1920-1976)

  736. The key to being a good manager is keeping the people who hate me away from those who are still undecided.

    Casey Stengel,

  737. The large print giveth, and the small print taketh away.

    Tom Waits

  738. The law an eye for an eye makes the whole world blind.

    Mohandes Gandhi

  739. The law, in its majestic equality, forbids the rich as well as the poor to sleep under bridges, to beg in the streets, and to steal bread.

    Anatole France

  740. The leadership instinct you are born with is the backbone. You develop the funny bone and the wishbone that go with it.

    Elaine Agather

  741. The lion and the calf shall lie down together, but the calf won't get much sleep.

    Woody Allen

  742. The living are soft and yielding; the dead are rigid and stiff. Living plants are flexible and tender; the dead are brittle and dry.

    Lao Tzu, (6th century BCE)

  743. The louder he talks of honour, the faster we count our spoons.

    Ralph Waldo Emerson

  744. The love of one's country is a splendid thing. But why should love stop at the border.

    Pablo Casals, (1876-1973)

  745. The machine does not isolate man from the great problems of nature but plunges him more deeply into them.

    Antoine de Saint-Exupery

  746. The main thing is to make history, not to write it.

    Otto von Bismarck

  747. The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation and go to the grave with the song still in them.

    Henry David Thoreau

  748. The means by which we live have outdistanced the ends for which we live. Our scientific power has outrun our spiritual power. We have guided missiles and misguided men.

    Martin Luther King, Jr. (1929-1968)

  749. The means is the ends in the process of becoming.

    Mahatma Gandhi

  750. The measure of a man's real character is what he would do if he knew he would never be found out.

    Thomas Babington Macaulay, (1800-1859)

  751. The meeting of two personalities is like the contact of two chemical substances: if there is any reaction, both are transformed.

    Carl Jung, (1875-1961)

  752. The memories of a man in his old age are the deeds of a man in his prime.

    Pink Floyd, "Free Four"

  753. The middle class and working poor are told that what's happening to them is the consequence of Adam Smith's "Invisible Hand." This is a lie. What's happening to them is the direct consequence of corporate activism, intellectual propaganda, the rise of a religious orthodoxy that in its hunger for government subsidies has made an idol of power, and a string of political decisions favoring the powerful and the privileged who bought the political system right out from under us.

    Bill Moyers, 2004

  754. The mind is its own place, and in itself, can make heaven of Hell, and a hell of Heaven.

    John Milton

  755. The mind of the bigot is like the pupil of the eye; the more light you pour upon it, the more it will contract.

    Oliver Wendell Holmes

  756. The mind of the bigot is like the pupil of the eye; the more light you pour upon it, the more it will contract.

    Oliver Wendell Holmes

  757. The mind of the superior man is conversant with virtue; the mind of the base man is conversant with gain.

    Confucius, Analects, ix, 13

  758. The moment one gives close attention to anything, even a blade of grass, it becomes a mysterious, awesome, indescribably magnificent world in itself.

    Henry Miller, (1891-1980)

  759. The more I study religions the more I am convinced that man never worshipped anything but himself.

    Richard Francis Burton, (1821-1890)

  760. The more powerful and original a mind, the more it will incline towards the religion of solitude.

    Aldous Huxley, (1894-1963)

  761. The more we live by our intellect, the less we understand the meaning of life.

    Leo Tolstoy, (1828-1910)

  762. The most advanced methods of science and rational calculation in the hands of a social system that is at odds with human needs produce nothing but irrationality; the more advanced the science and the more rational the calculations, the more swiftly and calamitously is this irrationality engendered. Like Captain Ahab, the capitalists say, "all my means are sane, my motives and object mad."

    Harry Braverman

  763. The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the source of all true art and science.

    Albert Einstein

  764. The most distressing thing that can happen to a prophet is to be proved wrong. The next most distressing thing is to be proved right.

    Aldous Huxley

  765. The most important scientific revolutions all include, as their only common feature, the dethronement of human arrogance from one pedestal after another of previous convictions about our centrality in the cosmos.

    Stephen Jay Gould, paleontologist, biologist, author (1941-2002)

  766. The most radical revolutionary will become a conservative the day after the revolution.

    Hannah Arendt

  767. The most violent element in society is ignorance.

    Emma Goldman

  768. The nationalist not only does not disapprove of atrocities committed by his own side, he has a remarkable capacity for not even hearing about them.

    George Orwell, (1903-1950)

  769. The newer people of this modern age are more eager to amass than to realize.

    Rabindranath Tagore

  770. The newest computer can merely compound, at speed, the oldest problem in the relations between human beings, and in the end the communicator will be confronted with the old problem, of what to say and how to say it.

    Edward R. Murrow

  771. The nice thing about egotists is that they don't talk about other people.

    Lucille S. Harper

  772. The nice thing about standards is that there are so many of them to choose from.

    Andrew S. Tanenbaum

  773. The nuclear arms race is like two sworn enemies standing waist deep in gasoline, one with three matches, the other with five.

    Carl Sagan, astronomer and writer (1934-1996)

  774. The old believe everything, the middle-aged suspect everything, the young know everything.

    Oscar Wilde

  775. The one serious conviction that a man should have is that nothing is to be taken too seriously.

    Samuel Butler

  776. The one thing that doesn't abide by majority rule is a person's conscience.

    Harper Lee, (1926- )

  777. The only constant is change

    Heraclitus

  778. The only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look respectable.

    John Kenneth Galbraith

  779. The only gift is giving to the poor; All else is exchange.

    Thiruvalluvar, (c. 30 BCE)

  780. The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man living with power to endanger the public liberty.

    John Adams, (1735-1826)

  781. The only person who is educated is the one who has learned how to learn...and change.

    Carl Rogers

  782. The only thing one can do with good advice is to pass it on. It is never of any use to oneself.

    Oscar Wilde

  783. The only time you don't fail is the last time you try anything ― and it works.

    William Strong

  784. The only tyrant I accept in this world is the "still small voice" within me.

    Mahatma Gandhi (1869-1948)

  785. The oppressed are allowed once every few years to decide which particular representatives of the oppressing class are to represent and repress them.

    Karl Marx

  786. The optimist proclaims we live in the best of all possible worlds, and the pessimist fears this is true.

    James Branch Cabell, (1879-1958)

  787. The palest ink is better than the best memory.

    Chinese proverb

  788. The past is really almost as much a work of the imagination as the future.

    Jessamyn West

  789. The past isn't dead. It isn't even past.

    William Faulkner

  790. The peculiar malaise of our day is air-conditioned unhappiness, the staleness and stuffiness of machine-made routine.

    Eugene B. Borowitz

  791. The penalty that good men pay for not being interested in politics is to be governed by men worse than themselves.

    Plato, (427-347 BCE)

  792. The people never give up their liberties, but under some delusion.

    Edmund Burke, (1729-1797)

  793. The perfect is the enemy of the good.

    Voltaire

  794. The person who has nothing for which he is willing to fight, nothing which is more important than his own personal safety, is a miserable creature and has no chance of being free unless made and kept so by the exertions of better men than himself.

    John Stuart Mill

  795. The pessimist complains about the wind; the optimist expects it to change; the realist adjusts the sails.

    William Arthur Ward, (1921-1994)

  796. The powers of selection, combination, and transmutation, which every seed shews, are truly miraculous. Who can imagine that these wonderful faculties are contained in these little bits of matter?

    T. Robert Malthus, 1789

  797. The practical, divorced from the disciplines of value, tends to be defined by the immediate interests of the practitioner, and so becomes destructive of value, practical and otherwise.

    Wendell Berry, 1977

  798. The principal objects which human punishments have in view are undoubtedly restraint and example; restraint, or removal, of an individual member whose vicious habits are likely to be prejudicial to the society; and example, which by expressing the sense of the community with regard to a particular crime, and by associating more nearly and visibly crime and punishment, holds out a moral motive to dissuade others from the commission of it.

    T. Robert Malthus, 1798

  799. The proper office of benevolence is to soften the partial evils arising from self-love, but it can never be substituted in its place.

    T. Robert Malthus, 1798

  800. The prophet, whether he be theologian or social scientist, is necessarily detached in some degree from the common currents of his age. From this detachment may come also an unrepresentative sense of aloneness, of alienation. However brilliant the searchlight of imagination, the direction of its brilliance is inevitably selective and always subjective to some extent

    Robert A. Nisbet

  801. The pursuit of truth and beauty is a sphere of activity in which we are permitted to remain children all our lives.

    Albert Einstein, (1879-1955)

  802. The radical novelty of modern science lies precisely in the rejection of the belief ... that the forces which move the stars and atoms are contingent upon the preferences of the human heart.

    Walter Lippman, (1889-1974)

  803. The radio is nothing but a conduit through which pre-fabricated din can flow into our homes. And this din goes far deeper, of course, than the eardrums. It penetrates the mind, filling it with a babble of distractions, blasts of corybantic or sentimental music, continually repeated doses of drama that bring no catharsis, but usually create a craving for daily or even hourly emotional enemas.

    Aldous Huxley; On Silence; 1946

  804. The real danger is not that computers will begin to think like men, but that men will begin to think like computers.

    Sydney J. Harris

  805. The reason there are so few female politicians is that it is too much trouble to put makeup on two faces.

    Maureen Murphy

  806. The release of atom power has changed everything except our way of thinking... the solution to this problem lies in the heart of mankind. If only I had known, I should have become a watchmaker.

    Albert Einstein

  807. The results of political changes are hardly ever those which their friends hope or their foes fear.

    Thomas H. Huxley

  808. The right of a nation to kill a tyrant in case of necessity can no more be doubted than to hang a robber, or kill a flea.

    John Adams

  809. The saddest aspect of life right now is that science gathers knowledge faster than society gathers wisdom.

    Isaac Asimov, scientist and writer (1920-1992)

  810. The satiated man and the hungry one do not see the same thing when they look upon a loaf of bread.

    Rumi

  811. The second day of a diet is always easier than the first. By the second day you're off it.

    Jackie Gleason

  812. The secret of getting things done is to act!

    Dante Alighieri

  813. The secret of life is honesty and fair dealing. If you can fake that, you've got it made.

    Groucho Marx

  814. The secret of man's being is not only to live but to have something to live for.

    Dostoyevsky

  815. The shepherd always tries to persuade the sheep that their interests and his own are the same.

    Stendal (Marie Henri Beyle), (1783-1842)

  816. The shoe that fits one person pinches another; there is no recipe for living that suits all cases.

    Carl Gustav Jung (1875-1961)

  817. The spirit of democracy cannot be imposed from without. It has to come from within.

    Mohandas K. Gandhi (1869-1948)

  818. The spirit of resistance to government is so valuable on certain occasions that I wish it to be always kept alive. It will often be exercised when wrong, but better so than not to be exercised at all.

    Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)

  819. The study of error is not only in the highest degree prophylactic, but it serves as a stimulating introduction to the study of truth.

    Walter Lippmann, (1889-1974)

  820. The sun, with all those planets revolving around it and dependent upon it, can still ripen a bunch of grapes as if it had nothing else in the universe to do.

    Galileo Galilei, (1564-1642)

  821. The tax which will be paid for the purpose of education is not more than the thousandth part of what will be paid to kings, priests and nobles who will rise up among us if we leave the people in ignorance.

    Thomas Jefferson, (1743-1826)

  822. The television, that insidious beast, that Medusa which freezes a billion people to stone every night, staring fixedly, that Siren which called and sang and promised so much and gave, after all, so little.

    Ray Bradbury, (1920- )

  823. The television, that insidious beast, that Medusa which freezes a billion people to stone every night, staring fixedly, that Siren which called and sang and promised so much and gave, after all, so little.

    Ray Bradbury, (1920- )

  824. The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much, it is whether we provide enough for those who have too little.

    Franklin D. Roosevelt, (1882-1945)

  825. The things we admire in men, kindness and generosity, openness, honesty, understanding and feeling are the concomitants of failure in our system. And those traits we detest, sharpness, greed, acquisitiveness, meanness, egotism and self-interest are the traits of success. And while men admire the quality of the first they love the produce of the second.

    John Steinbeck, (1902-1968)

  826. The time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time.

    Bertrand Russell, (1872-1970)

  827. The trouble with the world is that the stupid are cocksure and the intelligent are full of doubt.

    Bertrand Russell, (1872-1970)

  828. The true calling of sociology is to contribute to the self — understanding of society rather than to its manipulated improvement.

    Martin Bulmer

  829. The true danger is when liberty is nibbled away, for expedients, and by parts.

    Edmund Burke, (1729-1797)

  830. The true measure of a man is how he treats someone who can do him absolutely no good.

    Samuel Johnson, (1709-1784)

  831. The true test of a civilization is, not the census, nor the size of the cities, nor the crops — no, but the kind of man the country turns out.

    Ralph Waldo Emerson, (1803-1882)

  832. The truly creative mind in any field is no more than this: A human creature born abnormally, inhumanly sensitive. To him... a touch is a blow, a sound is a noise, a misfortune is a tragedy, a joy is an ecstasy, a friend is a lover, a lover is a god, and failure is death. Add to this cruelly delicate organism the overpowering necessity to create, create, create — so that without the creating of music or poetry or books or buildings or something of meaning, his very breath is cut off from him. He must create, must pour out creation. By some strange, unknown, inward urgency he is not really alive unless he is creating.

    Pearl S. Buck, (1892-1973)

  833. The truth is a precious commodity. That's why I use it so sparingly.

    Mark Twain, (1835-1910)

  834. The truth is the truth, whether it is told by Agamemnon or the man who keeps his pigs.

    Antonio Machado

  835. The two most engaging powers of an author are to make new things familiar, and familiar things new.

    Samuel Johnson, (1709-1784)

  836. The universe is a big place, perhaps the biggest.

    Kurt Vonnegut

  837. The universe is full of magical things, patiently waiting for our wits to grow sharper.

    Eden Phillpotts

  838. The unleashed power of the atom has changed everything save our modes of thinking and we thus drift toward unparalleled catastrophe.

    Albert Einstein (1879-1955)

  839. The value of marriage is not that adults produce children, but that children produce adults.

    Peter De Vries, (1910-1993)

  840. The value of the average conversation could be enormously improved by the constant use of four simple words: "I do not know."

    Andre Maurois

  841. The vast majority of human beings dislike and even dread all notions with which they are not familiar. Hence it comes about that at their first appearance innovators have always been derided as fools and madmen.

    Aldous Huxley, (1894-1963)

  842. The vast majority of human beings dislike and even dread all notions with which they are not familiar. Hence it comes about that at their first appearance innovators have always been derided as fools and madmen.

    Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)

  843. The very ink with which history is written is merely fluid prejudice.

    Mark Twain, (1835-1910)

  844. The virtues are lost in self-interest as rivers are lost in the sea.

  845. — Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945)

  846. The voice of conscience is so delicate that it is easy to stifle it; but it is also so clear that it is impossible to mistake it.

    Madame De Stael, (1766-1817)

  847. The voluntary actions of men may originate in their opinions, but these opinions will be very differently modified in creatures compounded of a rational faculty and corporal propensities from what they would be in beings wholly intellectual.

    T. Robert Malthus, 1798

  848. The wastebasket is a writer's best friend.

    Isaac Bashevis Singer, (1904-1991)

  849. The way to become boring is to say everything.

    Voltaire, (1694-1778)

  850. The way up and the way down are the same.

    Dostoevsky

  851. The weak can never forgive. Forgiveness is the attribute of the strong.

    Mohandas K. Gandhi, (1869-1948)

  852. The welfare — state government is not itself the initiator of most production within the economy. The corporations do that. However, that same government is increasingly charged with arranging the preconditions for profitable production. Its funds, its power, its political survival, depend on private sector performance. So do the jobs of most workers. The state's interest in perpetuating its own rule is thus, in economic fact, identified with the health of the capitalist economy.

    Michael Harrington, 1976

  853. The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed — and hence clamorous to be led to safety — by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary.

    H.L. Mencken, (1880-1956)

  854. The whole art of teaching is only the art of awakening the natural curiosity of young minds for the purpose of satisfying it afterwards.

    Anatole France, (1844-1924)

  855. The whole history of science has been the gradual realization that events do not happen in an arbitrary manner, but that they reflect a certain underlying order, which may or may not be divinely inspired.

    Stephen W. Hawking

  856. The whole motivation for any performer is "Look at me, Ma."

    Lenny Bruce

  857. The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts.

    Bertrand Russell

  858. The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts.

    Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)

  859. The world is a dangerous place to live, not because of the people who are evil, but because of the people who don't do anything about it.

    Albert Einstein

  860. The world of books is still the world.

    Elizabeth Barrett Browning

  861. The world owes all its onward impulses to men ill at ease. The happy man inevitably confines himself within ancient limits.

    Nathaniel Hawthorne, (1804-1864)

  862. The world, we are told, was made especially for man― a presumption not supported by all the facts... Why should man value himself as more than a small part of the one great unit of creation?

    John Muir, Naturalist and explorer (1838-1914)

  863. The worst error of all is to suppose that capitalism is simply an economic system.

    Frenand Braudel

  864. The worst of all deceptions is self-deception.

    Plato

  865. The worth of a book is to be measured by what you can carry away from it.

    James Bryce

  866. Therapeutic forms of social control, by softening or eliminating the adversary relation between subordinates and superiors, make it more and more difficult for citizens to defend themselves against the state or for workers to resist the demands of the corporation.

    Christopher Lasch, 1979

  867. There are a thousand thoughts lying within a man that he does not know till he takes up a pen to write.

    William Makepeace Thackeray, (1811-1863)

  868. There are many causes that I am prepared to die for but no causes that I am prepared to kill for.

    Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (1869-1948)

  869. There are risks and costs to action, but they are far less than the long range risks and costs of comfortable inaction.

    John F. Kennedy

  870. There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.

    Benjamin Disraeli

  871. There are times in politics when you must be on the right side and lose.

    John Kenneth Galbraith

  872. There are two kinds of men who never amount to much: those who cannot do what they are told, and those who can do nothing else.

    Cyrus Curtis

  873. There can be no joy of life without joy of work.

    Thomas Aquinas

  874. There can be no liberty for a community which lacks the means by which to detect lies.

    Walter Lippman, (1889-1974)

  875. There have been tyrants and murderers and for a time they seem invincible but in the end, they always fall — think of it, ALWAYS.

    Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (1869-1948)

  876. There is a field beyond all notions of right and wrong. Come, meet me there.

    Rumi

  877. There is a fine line between genius and insanity. I have erased this line.

    Oscar Levant

  878. There is a road from the eye to the heart that does not go through the intellect.

    G.K. Chesterton

  879. There is a theory which states that if ever anybody discovers exactly what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will instantly disappear and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable. There is another theory which states that this has already happened.

    Douglas Adams

  880. There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved.

    Charles Robert Darwin, The Origin of the Species, (1859)

  881. There is more to life than increasing its speed.

    Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi

  882. There is no absurdity so palpable but that it may be firmly planted in the human head if you only begin to inculcate it before the age of five, by constantly repeating it with an air of great solemnity.

    Arthur Schopenhauer, philosopher (1788-1860)

  883. There is no coming to consciousness without pain.

    Carl Jung, (1875-1961)

  884. There is no fundamental difference between man and the lower animals in their mental faculties... The lower animals, like man, manifestly feel pleasure and pain, happiness, and misery.

    Charles Darwin (1809-1882)

  885. There is no greater fallacy than the belief that aims and purposes are one thing, while methods and tactics are another.

    Emma Goldman, (1869-1940)

  886. There is no greater mistake than the hasty conclusion that opinions are worthless because they are badly argued.

    Thomas Huxley, biologist and writer (1825-1895)

  887. There is no greatness where there is not simplicity, goodness, and truth.

    Leo Tolstoy, (1828-1910)

  888. There is no kind of dishonesty into which otherwise good people more easily and frequently fall than that of defrauding the government.

    Benjamin Franklin, (1706-1790)

  889. There is no one, no matter how wise he is, who has not in his youth said things or done things that are so unpleasant to recall in later life that he would expunge them entirely from his memory if that were possible.

    Marcel Proust, novelist (1871-1922)

  890. There is no right way to do wrong.

    Anonymous

  891. There is no rule more invariable than that we are paid for our suspicions by finding what we suspect.

    Henry David Thoreau, (1817-1862)

  892. There is no such thing as a "self-made" man. We are made up of thousands of others. Everyone who has ever done a kind deed for us, or spoken one word of encouragement to us, has entered into the make-up of our character and of our thoughts.

    George Matthew Adams

  893. There is no terror in the bang, only in the anticipation of it.

    Alfred Hitchcock, (1899-1980)

  894. There is nothing more frightful than ignorance in action.

    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)

  895. There is nothing so agonizing to the fine skin of vanity as the application of a rough truth.

    Edward Bulwer-Lytton, writer (1803-1873)

  896. There is one thing even more vital to science than intelligent methods; and that is, the sincere desire to find out the truth, whatever it may be.

    Charles Pierce

  897. There is only one way to achieve happiness on this terrestrial ball, and that is to have either a clear conscience or none at all.

    Ogden Nash, (1902-1971)

  898. There may be times when we are powerless to prevent injustice, but there must never be a time when we fail to protest.

    Elie Wiesel, (1928- )

  899. There must be no barriers for freedom of inquiry. There is no place for dogma in science. The scientist is free, and must be free to ask any question, to doubt any assertion, to seek for any evidence, to correct any errors.

    J. Robert Oppenheimer

  900. There will one day spring from the brain of science a machine or force so fearful in its potentialities, so absolutely terrifying, that even man, the fighter, who will dare torture and death in order to inflict torture and death, will be appalled, and so abandon war forever.

    Thomas A. Edison

  901. There would be no society if living together depended upon understanding each other.

    Eric Hoffer, (1902-1983)

  902. There's a fine line between being on the leading edge and being in the lunatic fringe.

    Frank Armstrong

  903. There's a fine line between genius and insanity. I have erased this line.

    Oscar Levant

  904. There's no money in poetry, but then there's no poetry in money, either.

    Robert Graves, (1895-1985)

  905. There's two possible outcomes: if the result confirms the hypothesis, then you've made a discovery. If the result is contrary to the hypothesis, then you've made a discovery.

    Enrico Fermi

  906. These are not books, lumps of lifeless paper, but minds alive on the shelves.

    Gilbert Highet, writer (1906-1978)

  907. They are happy men whose natures sort with their vocations.

    Francis Bacon, essayist, philosopher, and statesman (1561-1626)

  908. This "telephone" has too many shortcomings to be seriously considered as a means of communication. The device is inherently of no value to us.

    Western Union internal memo, 1876

  909. This above all: to thine own self be true, And it must follow, as the night the day, Thou canst not then be false to any man.

    William Shakespeare, poet and dramatist (1564-1616)

  910. This is my rule of married life: it's better to be happy than to be right.

    Click & Clack, the Tappet Brothers

  911. This is the way the world ends Not with a bang but a whimper.

    T.S. Eliot, (1888-1965)

  912. This whole process of rationalization in the factory and elsewhere, and especially in the bureaucratic state machine, parallels the centralization of the material implements of organization in the hands of the master. Thus, discipline inexorably takes over ever larger areas as the satisfaction of political and economic needs is increasingly rationalized. This universal phenomenon more and more restricts the importance of charisma and of individually differentiated conduct.

    Max Weber, 1921

  913. This world is divided roughly into three kinds of nations: those that spend lots of money to keep their weight down; those whose people eat to live; and those whose people don't know where their next meal is coming from.

    David S. Landes, (1924- )

  914. Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.

    George Santayana, (1863-1952)

  915. Those who never retract their opinions love themselves more than they love truth.

    Joseph Joubert, (1754-1824)

  916. Those who profess to favor freedom and yet deprecate agitation, are men who want crops without plowing the ground.

    Frederick Douglass, (1817-1895)

  917. Those who write clearly have readers, those who write obscurely have commentators.

    Albert Camus, (1913-1960)

  918. Thus the yeoman work in any science, and especially physics, is done by the experimentalist, who must keep the theoreticians honest.

    Michio Kaku

  919. Time is a great teacher, but unfortunately it kills all its pupils.

    H. Berlioz

  920. Time is nature's way of making sure everything doesn't happen at once.

    Anonymous

  921. To announce that there must be no criticism of the President, or that we are to stand by the President, right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public.

    Theodore Roosevelt, (1858-1919)

  922. To announce that there must be no criticism of the president, or that we are to stand by the president, right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public.

    Theodore Roosevelt

  923. To array a man's will against his sickness is the supreme art of medicine.

    Henry Ward Beecher, preacher and writer (1813-1887)

  924. To avoid criticism do nothing, say nothing, be nothing.

    Elbert Hubbard

  925. To be prepared is half the victory.

    Miguel de Cervantes

  926. To believe that what has not occurred in history will not occur at all, is to argue disbelief in the dignity of man.

    Mahatma Gandhi (1869-1948)

  927. To defeat them, first we must understand them.

    Elie Wiesel

  928. To err is human, but to really foul things up you need a computer.

    Paul Ehrlich

  929. To err is human. To blame someone else is politics.

    Hubert H. Humphrey

  930. To fall in love is to create a religion that has a fallible god.

    Jorge Luis Borges, (1899-1986)

  931. To find a person who will love you for no reason, and to shower that person with reasons, that is the ultimate happiness.

    Robert Brault

  932. To give pleasure to a single heart by a single act is better than a thousand heads bowing in prayer.

    Mahatma Gandhi (1869-1948)

  933. To give pleasure to a single heart by a single kind act is better than a thousand head-bowings in prayer.

    Saadi, (c. 1200 AD)

  934. To govern is to serve, not to rule.

    Seneca

  935. To kill time is not murder, it's suicide.

    William James, (1842-1910)

  936. To lead people, walk beside them ... As for the best leaders, the people do not notice their existence. The next best, the people honor and praise. The next, the people fear; and the next, the people hate ... When the best leader's work is done the people say, "We did it ourselves!"

    Lao-tsu

  937. To plan for the future without having a sense of history is like trying to plant cut flowers.

    David McCullough

  938. To raise new questions, new possibilities, to regard old problems from a new angle, requires creative imagination and marks real advance in science.

    Albert Einstein

  939. To resist the frigidity of old age one must combine the body, the mind and the heart― and to keep them in parallel vigor one must exercise, study and love.

    Karl Viktor von Bonstetten, author (1745-1832)

  940. To retain respect for sausages and laws, one must not watch them in the making.

    Otto von Bismarck

  941. To see ourselves as others see us is a most salutary gift. Hardly less important is the capacity to see others as they see themselves.

    Aldous Huxley, (1894-1963)

  942. To sin by silence when they should protest makes cowards of men.

    Abraham Lincoln, (1809-1865)

  943. To study the abnormal is the best way of understanding the normal.

    William James

  944. To stumble twice against the same stone is a proverbial disgrace.

    Marcus Tullius Cicero, (106-43 BCE)

  945. To this extent increasing bureaucratization is a function of the increasing possession of goods used for consumption, and of an increasingly sophisticated technique for fashioning external life― a technique which corresponds to the opportunities provided by such wealth.

    Max Weber

  946. To understand God's thoughts we must study statistics; for these are the measure of his purpose.

    Florence Nightingale, 1820-1910

  947. Today the real test of power is not capacity to make war but capacity to prevent it.

    Anne O'Hare McCormick

  948. Today's public figures can no longer write their own speeches or books, and there is some evidence that they can't read them either.

    Gore Vidal, (1925- )

  949. Too many people spend money they haven't earned, to buy things they don't want, to impress people they don't like.

    Will Rogers

  950. Too many people spend money they haven't earned, to buy things they don't want, to impress people they don't like.

    Will Rogers, humorist (1879-1935)

  951. Treat people as if they were what they ought to be, and you help them to become what they are capable of being.

    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)

  952. Trust in Allah, but tie your camel.

    Arabic saying

  953. Truth is more of a stranger than fiction.

    Mark Twain

  954. Truth is not only violated by falsehood; it may be equally outraged by silence.

    Henri Frederic Amiel (1821-1881)

  955. Truth never damages a cause that is just.

    Mohandas K. Gandhi

  956. Truth often suffers more by the heat of its defenders than the arguments of its opposers.

    William Penn

  957. Truth, like gold, is to be obtained not by its growth, but by washing away from it all that is not gold.

    Leo Tolstoy

  958. Under capitalism, man exploits man. Under communism, it's just the opposite.

    John Kenneth Galbraith

  959. Under democracy one party always devotes its chief energies to trying to prove that the other party is unfit to rule — and both commonly succeed, and are right.

    H.L. Mencken, (1880-1956)

  960. Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown.

    William Shakespeare, (1564-1616)

  961. University politics are vicious precisely because the stakes are so small.

    Henry Kissinger

  962. Unthinking respect for authority is the greatest enemy of truth.

    Albert Einstein, (1879-1955)

  963. Until it is kindled by a spirit as flamingly alive as the one which gave it birth a book is dead to us. Words divested of their magic are but dead hieroglyphs.

    Henry Miller, (1891-1980)

  964. Upon this gifted age, in its dark hour Rains from the sky, a meteoric shower Of facts. . . . They lie unquestioned, uncombined. Wisdom enough to leech us of our ill Is daily spun, but there exists no loom To weave it into fabric.

    Edna St. Vincent Millay

  965. Use the talents you possess, for the woods would be a very silent place if no birds sang except the best.

    Henry Van Dyke

  966. Very few established institutions, governments and constitutions ... are ever destroyed by their enemies until they have been corrupted and weakened by their friends.

    Walter Lippman, (1889-1974)

  967. Visits always give pleasure― if not the arrival, the departure.

    Portuguese Proverb

  968. Walking is also an ambulation of mind.

    Gretel Ehrlich, (1946- )

  969. Walking is man's best medicine.

    Hippocrates, (460-377 BC)

  970. War is God's way of teaching Americans geography.

    Ambrose Bierce, (1842-1914)

  971. War would end if the dead could return.

    Stanley Baldwin, (1867-1947)

  972. Washing one's hands of the conflict between the powerful and the powerless means to side with the powerful, not to be neutral.

    Paulo Freire, educator (1921-1997)

  973. We aim above the mark to hit the mark.

    Ralph W. Emerson, (1803-1882)

  974. We are all born originals — why is it so many of us die copies?

    Edward Young, poet (1683-1765)

  975. We are here to make another world.

    W. Edwards Deming

  976. We are not makers of history. We are made by history.

    Martin Luther King, Jr.

  977. We are not retreating― we are advancing in another direction.

    General Douglas MacArthur (1880-1964)

  978. We are not the same persons this year as last; nor are those we love. It is a happy chance if we, changing, continue to love a changed person.

    William Somerset Maugham, (1874-1965)

  979. We are so accustomed to disguise ourselves to others that in the end we become disguised to ourselves.

    Francois, duc de La Rochefoucauld, (1613-1680)

  980. We build too many walls and not enough bridges.

    Sir Isaac Newton

  981. We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.

    Albert Einstein, (1879-1955)

  982. We cannot defend freedom abroad by deserting it at home.

    Edward R. Murrow, (1908-1965)

  983. We do not see things as they are, we see things as we are.

    Talmudic Saying

  984. We get the belief in the old age of mankind, the belief, at all times harmful, that we are late survivals, mere epigoni.

    Nietzsche

  985. We have always known that heedless self interest was bad morals; we know now that it is bad economics.

    Franklin D. Roosevelt, 1936

  986. We have enslaved the rest of the animal creation, and have treated our distant cousins in fur and feathers so badly that beyond doubt, if they were able to formulate a religion, they would depict the Devil in human form.

    William R. Inge (1860-1954)

  987. We have grasped the mystery of the atom and rejected the Sermon on the Mount....The world has achieved brilliance without conscience. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants.

    Omar Bradley, Armistice Day Speech, 1948

  988. We have in fact, two kinds of morality, side by side: one which we preach, but do not practice, and another which we practice, but seldom preach.

    Bertrand Russell, (1872-1970)

  989. We have met the enemy and he is us.

    Pogo (Walt Kelly, cartoonist, 1913-1973)

  990. We have to choose between a global market driven only by calculations of short-term profit, and one which has a human face.

    Kofi Annan

  991. We have, I fear, confused power with greatness.

    Steward L. Udall

  992. We know accurately only when we know little, with knowledge doubt increases.

    Goethe (1749-1832)

  993. We know what we are, but know not what we may be.

    Shakespeare, (1564-1616)

  994. We lie the loudest when we lie to ourselves.

    Eric Hoffer, philosopher and author (1902-1983)

  995. We lie the loudest when we lie to ourselves.

    Eric Hoffer, philosopher and author (1902-1983)

  996. We live in a society exquisitely dependent on science and technology, in which hardly anyone knows anything about science and technology.

    Carl Sagan (1934-1996)

  997. We ought not to treat living creatures like shoes or household belongings, which when worn with use we throw away.

    Plutarch, biographer (c. 46-120)

  998. We owe to the Middle Ages the two worst inventions of humanity― romantic love and gunpowder.

    Andre Maurois

  999. We should measure affection, not like youngsters by the ardor of its passion, but by its strength and constancy.

    Marcus Tullius Cicero, (106-43 BCE)

  1000. We should not pretend to understand the world only by the intellect. The judgment of the intellect is only part of the truth.

    Carl Gustav Jung

  1001. We should try to be the parents of our future rather than the offspring of our past.

    Miguel de Unamuno, (1864-1936)

  1002. We started out like Romeo and Juliet but ended in tragedy.

    Milhous van Houten

  1003. We think caged birds sing, when indeed they cry.

    John Webster

  1004. We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security.

    Dwight David Eisenhower, (1890-1969)

  1005. We've arranged a civilization in which most crucial elements profoundly depend on science and technology.

    Carl Sagan (1934-1996)

  1006. What I stand for is what I stand on.

    Wendell Berry, (1934- )

  1007. What I stand for is what I stand on.

    Wendell Berry, farmer, author (b. 1934)

  1008. What a man says drunk he has thought sober.

    Flemish proverb

  1009. What a strange machine man is! You fill him with bread, wine, fish, and radishes, and out comes sighs, laughter, and dreams.

    Nikos Kazantzakis, poet and novelist (1883-1957)

  1010. What if there were no hypothetical situations?

    Andrew Kohlsmith

  1011. What is done well is done quickly enough.

    Augustus Caesar

  1012. What is history but a fable agreed upon?

    Napoleon Bonaparte

  1013. What is laid down, ordered, factual is never enough to embrace the whole truth: life always spills over the rim of every cup.

    Boris Pasternak

  1014. What religion a man shall have is a historical accident, quite as much as what language he shall speak.

    George Santayana, (1863-1952)

  1015. What the country needs are a few labor-making inventions.

    Arnold H. Glasow

  1016. What we see depends on mainly what we look for.

    John Lubbock

  1017. What you cannot enforce, do not command.

    Sophocles, dramatist (495? - 406 BCE)

  1018. What's done to children, they will do to society.

    Karl A. Menninger, (1893-1990)

  1019. Whatever creativity is, it is in part a solution to a problem.

    Brian Aldiss,

  1020. Whatever you do will be insignificant. But it is very important that you do it.

    Gandhi

  1021. When Democrats open their mouths, they try to say something interesting. If the true thing is obvious and boring, the liberal person will go off and say something original, even if it is completely idiotic. This is how deconstructionism got started.

    David Brooks

  1022. When I despair, I remember that all through history, the way of truth and love has always won. There have been murderers and tyrants, and for a time they can seem invincible. But in the end they always fall. Think of it, always.

    Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (1869-1948)

  1023. When I was a boy I was told that anybody could become President. Now I'm beginning to believe it.

    Clarence Darrow, (1857-1938)

  1024. When I was a kid I used to pray every night for a new bicycle. Then I realized that the Lord doesn't work that way, so I stole one and asked for forgiveness.

    Emo Philips, (1956- )

  1025. When a country is governed well, poverty and mean condition are things to be ashamed of. When a country is governed poorly, riches and honor are things to be ashamed of.

    Confucius, Analects, iv, 16

  1026. When a man wants to murder a tiger he calls it sport; when the tiger wants to murder him he calls it ferocity.

    George Bernard Shaw, (1856-1950)

  1027. When a population becomes distracted by trivia, when cultural life is redefined as a perpetual round of entertainments, when serious public conversation becomes a form of baby-talk, when, in short, a people become an audience and their public business a vaudeville act, then a nation finds itself at risk; culture-death is a clear possibility.

    Neil Postman, Amusing Ourselves to Death

  1028. When a thing is funny, search it carefully for a hidden truth.

    George Bernard Shaw, (1856-1950)

  1029. When choosing between two evils I always like to take the one I've never tried before.

    Mae West

  1030. When cryptography is outlawed, bayl bhgynjf jvyy unir cevinpl.

    Anonymous

  1031. When governments fear the people there is liberty. When the people fear the government there is tyranny.

    Thomas Jefferson, (1743-1826)

  1032. When great changes occur in history, when great principles are involved, as a rule the majority are wrong.

    Eugene V. Debs

  1033. When love and skill work together, expect a masterpiece.

    John Ruskin, (1819-1900)

  1034. When nations grow old, the arts grow cold and commerce settles on every tree.

    William Blake, poet, engraver, and painter (1757-1827)

  1035. When one tugs at a single thing in nature, he finds it attached to the rest of the world.

    John Muir, (1838-1914)

  1036. When the flag is unfurled, all reason is in the trumpet.

    Ukrainian proverb

  1037. When we ask advice, we are usually looking for an accomplice.

    Marquis de la Grange

  1038. When work is a pleasure, life is a joy! When work is a duty, life is slavery.

    Maxim Gorky, author (1868-1936)

  1039. When you choose the lesser of two evils, always remember that it is still an evil.

    Max Lerner

  1040. When you enjoy loving your neighbor it ceases to be a virtue.

    Kahlil Gibran, (1883-1931)

  1041. When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth.

    Arthur Conan Doyle (1859-1930)

  1042. When you live in the shadow of insanity, the appearance of another mind that thinks and talks as yours does is something close to a blessed event.

    R. Pirsig

  1043. When you starve with a tiger, the tiger starves last.

    Griffin's Thought

  1044. When you think of the long and gloomy history of man, you will find more hideous crimes have been committed in the name of obedience than have ever been committed in the name of rebellion.

    C.P. Snow, (1905-1980)

  1045. Whenever a separation is made between liberty and justice, neither, in my opinion, is safe.

    Edmund Burke

  1046. Whenever books are burned men also in the end are burned.

    Heinrich Heine

  1047. Whenever you fall, pick something up.

    Oswald Avery

  1048. Where the spirit does not work with the hand there is no art.

    Leonardo da Vinci

  1049. Wherever one looks in the world of human organization, collective responsibility brings a lowering of moral standards.

    Freeman Dyson

  1050. Wherever you have an efficient government you have a dictatorship.

    Harry S. Truman, (1884-1972)

  1051. Whether you think you can or whether you think you can't — you're right.

    Henry Ford

  1052. While many talk of our agriculture keeping up with population growth, it would be more accurate to say that our population growth has kept up with our agriculture.

    Frank Elwell

  1053. Who is more to be pitied, a writer bound and gagged by policemen or one living in perfect freedom who has nothing more to say?

    Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. (1922-) [Bluebeard, 1987]

  1054. Who overcomes by force hath overcome but half his foe.

    John Milton, poet (1608-1674)

  1055. Who says organization, says oligarchy.

    Robert Michels, 1915

  1056. Whoever degrades another degrades me.

    Walt Whitman

  1057. Whoever imagines himself a favorite with God holds others in contempt.

    Robert Green Ingersoll, (1833-1899)

  1058. Whoever undertakes to set himself up as a judge of Truth and Knowledge is shipwrecked by the laughter of the gods.

    Albert Einstein (1879-1955)

  1059. Why is it when we talk to God we're praying — but when God talks to us, we're schizophrenic?

    Lily Tomlin

  1060. Why should we be in such desperate haste to succeed, and in such desperate enterprises? If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer.

    Henry David Thoreau

  1061. Wit makes its own welcome, and levels all distinctions. No dignity, no learning, no force of character, can make any stand against good wit.

    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)

  1062. Within the realm of social conduct one finds factual regularities, that is, courses of action which, with a typically identical meaning, are repeated by the actors or simultaneously occur among numerous actors. It is with such types of conduct that sociology is concerned, in contrast to history, which is interested in the causal connections of important, i.e., fateful, single events.

    Max Weber, 1921

  1063. Without books the development of civilization would have been impossible. They are the engines of change, windows on the world, "Lighthouses" as the poet said "erected in the sea of time." They are companions, teachers, magicians, bankers of the treasures of the mind, Books are humanity in print.

    Arthur Schopenhauer , philosopher (1788-1860)

  1064. Without darkness there are no dreams.

    Karla Kuban

  1065. Without valleys there would be no peaks.

    Johnny Carson, (1925-2005)

  1066. Words, like eyeglasses, obscure everything they do not make clear.

    Joseph Joubert, moralist and essayist (1754-1824)

  1067. Work is of two kinds: first, altering the position of matter at or near the earth's surface relative to other matter; second, telling other people to do so. The first is unpleasant and ill-paid; the second is pleasant and highly paid.

    Bertrand Russell, (1872-1970)

  1068. Work saves us from three great evils: boredom, vice and need.

    Voltaire, (1694-1778)

  1069. Work to become, not to acquire.

    Elbert Hubbard

  1070. Writing is like driving a car at night. You can only see as far as the headlights, but you make the whole trip that way.

    E. L. Doctorow, (1931- )

  1071. Writing is like driving a car at night. You can only see as far as the headlights, but you make the whole trip that way.

    E.L. Doctorow, (1931- )

  1072. Writing the last page of the first draft is the most enjoyable moment in writing. It's one of the most enjoyable moments in life, period.

    Nicholas Sparks, author (1965- )

  1073. You are never too old to be what you might have been.

    George Eliot (Mary Ann Evans), (1819-1880)

  1074. You become a champion by fighting one more round. When things are tough, you fight one more round.

    James Corbett (Boxer)

  1075. You campaign in poetry. You govern in prose.

    Mario M Cuomo, (1932- )

  1076. You can always spot a well informed man — his views are the same as yours.

    Ilka Chase

  1077. You can have nice things or you can have children.

    Betty J. Elwell, (1927-1997)

  1078. You can safely assume that you've created God in your own image when it turns out that God hates all the same people you do.

    Anne Lamott, (1954- )

  1079. You can't always get what you want. But if you try, sometimes you'll find what you need.

    Rolling Stones

  1080. You can't do anything about the length of your life, but you can do something about its width and depth.

    H. L. Mencken, (1880-1956)

  1081. You can't say civilization isn't advancing, in every war they kill you in a new way.

    Will Rogers, American humorist (1879-1935)

  1082. You cannot depend on your eyes when your imagination is out of focus.

    Mark Twain, (1835-1910)

  1083. You cannot shake hands with a clenched fist.

    Indira Gandhi

  1084. You forget that the fruits belong to all and that the land belongs to no one.

    Jean Jacques Rousseau

  1085. You have reached the pinnacle of success as soon as you become uninterested in money, compliments, or publicity.

    Thomas Wolfe, (1900-1938)

  1086. You have to learn to see. If you can appreciate what has quality and what is worthless in art, you will appreciate it in people.

    Adele Block-Bauer [1881-1925]

  1087. You may have to fight a battle more than once to win it.

    Margaret Thatcher

  1088. You must accept the truth from whatever source it comes.

    Moses ben Maimon, philosopher (1135-1204)

  1089. You must not lose faith in humanity. Humanity is an ocean; if a few drops of the ocean are dirty, the ocean does not become dirty.

    Mohandas K. Gandhi (1869-1948)

  1090. You see things and you say "why?" But I dream things that never were and I say "why not?"

    George Bernard Shaw

  1091. You think your pains and heartbreaks are unprecedented in the history of the world, but then you read. It was books that taught me that the things that tormented me were the very things that connected me with all the people who were alive, or who have ever been alive.

    James Baldwin, (1924-1987)

  1092. Your argument is sound, nothing but sound.

    Benjamin Franklin

  1093. Your children need your presence more than your presents.

    Anonymous

  1094. Experience should teach us to be most on our guard to protect liberty when the government's purposes are beneficent. (…) The greatest dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men of zeal, well-meaning but without understanding.

    Justice Louis D. Brandeis, 1928 case of Olmstead v. United States