Quotes with -which-

Quotes 801 till 820 of 3662.

  • Gilbert Keith Chesterton Experience which was once claimed by the aged is now claimed exclusively by the young.
    Gilbert Keith Chesterton
    English writer (1874 - 1936)
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  • Karl Kraus Experiences are savings which a miser puts aside. Wisdom is an inheritance which a wastrel cannot exhaust.
    Karl Kraus
    Austrian writer and journalist (1874 - 1936)
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  • Blaise Pascal Faith embraces many truths which seem to contradict each other.
    Blaise Pascal
    French mathematician, physicist and philosopher (1623 - 1662)
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  • John R. Stott Faith is a reasoning trust, a trust which reckons thoughtfully and confidently upon the trustworthiness of God.
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  • George Sand Faith is an excitement and an enthusiasm: it is a condition of intellectual magnificence to which we must cling as to a treasure, and not squander on our way through life in the small coin of empty words, or in exact and priggish argument.
    George Sand
    French writer (1804 - 1876)
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  • Kahlil Gibran Faith is an oasis in the heart which will never be reached by the caravan of thinking.
    Kahlil Gibran
    Libian painter and writer (1883 - 1931)
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  • Georges Bernanos Faith is not a thing which one ''loses,'' we merely cease to shape our lives by it.
    Georges Bernanos
    French writer (1888 - 1948)
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  • Bruce Lee Faith makes it possible to achieve that which man's mind can conceive and believe.
    Jeet Kune Do (1997) Part 6
    Bruce Lee
    Chinese-American Actor, Director, Author, Martial Artist (1940 - 1973)
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  • William James Faith means belief in something concerning which doubt is theoretically possible.
    William James
    American philosopher (1842 - 1910)
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  • E. M. Forster Faith, to my mind, is a stiffening process, a sort of mental starch, which ought to be applied as sparingly as possible.
    E. M. Forster
    English novelist, short story writer, essayist and librettist (1879 - 1970)
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  • Reinhold Niebuhr Family life is too intimate to be preserved by the spirit of justice. It can be sustained by a spirit of love which goes beyond justice.
    Reinhold Niebuhr
    American theologist, historian (1892 - 1971)
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  • Carl Gustav Jung Far from being a material world, this is a psychic world, which allows us to make only indirect and hypothetical inferences about the real nature of matter. The psychic, alone has immediate reality, and this includes all forms of the psychic, even the 'unreal' ideas and thoughts which refer to nothing 'external'. We may call them 'imagination' or 'delusion,' but that does not detract in any way from their effectiveness...
    Carl Gustav Jung
    Swiss psychiatrist (1875 - 1961)
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  • Benito Mussolini Fascism conceives of the State as an absolute, in comparison with which all individuals or groups are relative, only to be conceived in their relation to the State.
    The Doctrine of Fascism
    Benito Mussolini
    Italian journalist, politician and dictator (1883 - 1945)
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  • Oscar Wilde Fashion, by which what is really fantastic becomes for a moment the universal.
    Oscar Wilde
    Irish writer (1854 - 1900)
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  • Citium Zeno Fate is the endless chain of causation, whereby things are; the reason or formula by which the world goes on.
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  • Ralph Waldo Emerson Fate, then, is a name for facts not yet passed under the fire of thought; for causes which are unpenetrated.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson
    American poet and philosopher (1803 - 1882)
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  • Viktor E. Frankl Fear may come true that which one is afraid of.
    Viktor E. Frankl
    Austrian psychiatrist (1905 - 1997)
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  • Louis Aragon Fear of error which everything recalls to me at every moment of the flight of my ideas, this mania for control, makes men prefer reason's imagination to the imagination of the senses. And yet it is always the imagination alone which is at work.
    Louis Aragon
    French poet (1897 - 1982)
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  • Susan Sontag Fear of sexuality is the new, disease-sponsored register of the universe of fear in which everyone now lives.
    Susan Sontag
    American writer, filmmaker, teacher, and political activist (1933 - 2004)
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  • John W. Foster Few are sufficiently sensible of the importance of that economy in reading which selects, almost exclusively, the very first order of books. Why, except for some special reason, read an inferior book, at the very time you might be reading one of the highest order?
    John W. Foster
    American diplomat and military (1836 - 1917)
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