No Sentiments Quotes
Collection of top 46 famous quotes about No Sentiments
No Sentiments Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational No Sentiments quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Four innate sentiments dispose people to a universal moral sense. These are sympathy, fairness, self-control and duty.
— James Q. Wilson
The sentiments of an adult are compounded of a kernal of instinct surrounded by a vast husk of education.
— Bertrand Russell
The sentiments in Hawaii about Washington's failure of leadership are no different than the rest of the country.
— Ed Case
Memories, imagination, old sentiments, and associations are more readily reached through the sense of smell than through any other channel.
— Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.
Sentiment never was and never can be a guarantee for justice.
— Susan B. Anthony
It is not the strengths, but the durations of great sentiments that make great men.
— Friedrich Nietzsche
But ah cannae even endorse these sentiments as they are at best peripheral tae the moment.
— Irvine Welsh
A crowd is only impressed by excessive sentiments. Exaggerate, affirm, resort to repetition, and never attempt to prove anything by reasoning.
— Jon Ronson
A problem with a president who leads by stirring the moral sentiments of voters is that he has got to keep stirring them.
— Jill Lepore
Nothing is stronger or better founded than the sentiments for which we can give no reason.
— Jeanne Julie Eleonore De Lespinasse
Some people value sentiments over diamonds.
— Cassandra Clare
Every man has a right to keep his own sentiments if he pleases.
— Richard Yates
We are such volatile creatures, we finally feel sentiments we feign
— Benjamin Constant
Reserved people often really need the frank discussion of their sentiments and griefs more than the expansive.
— Charlotte Bronte
The nobler the truth or sentiment, the less imports the question of authorship.
— Ralph Waldo Emerson
The sentiment of fear is nearly allied to that of hatred.
— Edward Gibbon
I have no sentiments for nationality or for soil. But I grew up in Israel, so those things are in my blood, and I want to be part of Israeli culture.
— Mili Avital
There is no more effective medicine to apply to feverish public sentiments than figures.
— Ida Tarbell
I hate talking where there is no exchange of ideas or sentiments, and no good given or received
— Anne Bronte
The English have no exaulted sentiments. They can all be bought.
— Napoleon Bonaparte
No one is mediocre who has good sense and good sentiments.
— Joseph Joubert
Preaching is the expression of moral sentiments applied to the duties of life.
— Ralph Waldo Emerson
The profligacy of a man of fashion is looked upon with much less contempt and aversion, than that of a man of meaner condition.
— Adam Smith
That is the happiest conversation where there is no competition, no vanity, but a calm, quiet interchange of sentiments ...
— Samuel Johnson
is probable that, like the illustrious author of the drama, all were unconscious of any incongruity between their sentiments and actions.
— Edith Wharton
The politician is the creature of the public sentiment
never goes ahead of it because he depends on it ... — Lucy Stone
never goes ahead of it because he depends on it ... — Lucy Stone
Most wise men, in their private sentiments, have ever treated hereditary right with contempt; yet
— Thomas Paine
The human soul is hospitable, and will entertain conflicting sentiments and contradictory opinions with much impartiality.
— George Eliot
There's been quite a clear upswing in nationalist sentiments. Everyone is talking about it, in Turkey as well.
— Orhan Pamuk
[Nostalgic sentiments] are nothing other than the rosy illumination of a past that has been spared the shadows of the present.
— Georg Simmel
One ounce of the practice of righteousness and of spiritual Self-realisation outweighs tons and tons of frothy talk and nonsensical sentiments.
— Swami Vivekananda
In the end we all come to be cured of our sentiments.
— Cormac McCarthy
The only pictorial matter that is of interest to me is the matter and sentiments brought about by the work itself.
— Pablo Picasso
Sometimes sentiments were better left in song.
— Tania James