Abhorrence Quotes
Collection of top 39 famous quotes about Abhorrence
Abhorrence Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Abhorrence quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Once an opinion is formed, there will be attachment-abhorrence. A person without opinion is also without attachment-abhorrence.
— Dada Bhagwan
Abhorrence is the cause for conflicts. God has said, 'Do no abhorrence. If you don't like it, ignore it'.
— Dada Bhagwan
Attachment-abhorrence is the foundation for the worldly life and the foundation for 'Knowledge' is a state free of all attachments (vitragta).
— Dada Bhagwan
Seven men to beat up one who was tied and defenceless. Seven men who would have no intestines by the time dawn crested. This was a playground scuffle.
— Pepper Winters
An ineffably holy God, who has the utmost abhorrence of sin, was never invented by any of Adam's descendents.
— Arthur W. Pink
Always be conscious of the fact that someone somewhere is learning a new lesson watching you live your life
— Wogu Donald
When attachment does not occur when someone gives flowers and no abhorrence occurs when someone throws stones; that is considered equanimity.
— Dada Bhagwan
A phenomenon that might seem only backwards or silly when expressed at a social level becomes madness at the individual level.
— Caitlin R. Kiernan
It is the nature of the circumstances to disperse. If there is attachment with the circumstance, there will be abhorrence when they get dispersed.
— Dada Bhagwan
How terrible it would be to be doing something you didn't like every day
— L.M. Montgomery
I have made myself more complicated than I really am.
— Nick Hornby
In those days, slavery was not looked upon, even in Quaker Philadelphia, with the shudder and abhorrence one feels towards it now.
— John Sergeant Wise
Mumbling obeisance to abhorrence of apartheid is like those lapsed believers who cross themselves when entering a church.
— Nadine Gordimer
Let the sexes mutually forgive each other their follies; or, what is much better, let them combine their talents for their general advantage.
— Maria Edgeworth
For I had loved Seid even in his darkest hours, even as he cursed me and we rode upon a fine line between ardor and abhorrence
— Jennifer Silverwood
Friendship is a weird sort of thing when you think about it.
— Rachael Lucas
Most writers, most books, you have no idea whether it was a dollar or a million dollars.
— Chad Harbach
Prejudice validates itself as righteous abhorrence of the criminally deviant. So Christian homophobia is just a metonym of that abjection in general.
— Hal Duncan
All actions are of the relative-self (prakrutik). Moksha (liberation) is the absence of attachment and abhorrence therein.
— Dada Bhagwan
Physical pleasures are not associated with attachment-abhorrence; the belief in an opinion itself is attachment-abhorrence.
— Dada Bhagwan
I write poetry anyway and have for years and years. For me, putting fiction and poetry together is like the best of both worlds.
— Ellen Hopkins
Abhorrence of apartheid is a moral attitude, not a policy.
— Edward Heath
I went from working with Spielberg to working with Clint Eastwood - I might as well just retire.
— Owain Yeoman
Not doing attachment-abhorrence (raag-dwesh) while experiencing the unfolding of karma is religion.
— Dada Bhagwan
A person has two passions for love and abhorrence. A big disposition to excessiveness has just a love, because it is more ardent and stronger.
— Rene Descartes
And was it his destined part /
Only one moment in his life /
To be close to your heart? — Ivan Turgenev
Only one moment in his life /
To be close to your heart? — Ivan Turgenev
The mere abhorrence of vice is not a virtue at all.
— Bergen Evans
You hate me; but your abhorrence cannot equal that with which I regard myself.
— Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
My record is, far as I know, unimpeachable.
— Mitch Daniels
We should transmit to posterity our abhorrence of slavery.
— Patrick Henry
I have, indeed, no abhorrence of danger, except in its absolute effect - in terror.
— Edgar Allan Poe
Few things loves better Than to abhor himself.
— William Shakespeare
I prefer to be true to myself, even at the hazard of incurring the ridicule of others, rather than to be false, and to incur my own abhorrence.
— Frederick Douglass