Origin Of Man Quotes
Collection of top 27 famous quotes about Origin Of Man
Origin Of Man Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Origin Of Man quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
I think one can advance faster outside a monastery if you use the experiences of daily life to advance yourself.
— Frederick Lenz
Do ye remember the love potion Una made for yer feckin' balls and how the gnats bit the hell outta big daddy and the twins?
— Vonnie Davis
In the morning, coming awake was like drowning.
— Kristin Cashore
The emotion felt by a man in the presence of nature certainly counts for something in the origin of religions.
— Henri Bergson
There is nothing great in the world that does not owe its origin to the creative ability of an individual man.
— Adolf Hitler
Poetry, in a general sense, may be defined to be 'the expression of the imagination': and poetry is connate with the origin of man.
— Percy Bysshe Shelley
I think man will never renounce real suffering, that is destruction and chaos. Why, suffering is the sole origin of consciousness.
— Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Light will be thrown on the origin of man and his history.
— Charles Darwin
If you can't get a boy, get a book.
— Bill Condon
From its origin to the present hour, in all its vicissitudes, Masonry has been the steady unwearing friend of man.
— Theodore Roosevelt
Where is the source of all money-sickness, and the origin of all sex-perversion? ... It lies in the heart of man, and not in the conditions.
— D.H. Lawrence
Without seeing the origin of light, the true form of one's Self, the ordinary man sees by the mind different things and is deluded.
— Ramana Maharshi
Laws have come down to us from old customs and folk-ways based on primitive ideas of man's origin, capacity and responsibility.
— Clarence Darrow
Law in origin was merely a codification of the power of dominant groups, and did not aim at anything that to a modern man would appear to be justice
— Bertrand Russell
Insight into the origin of a work concerns the physiologists and vivisectionists of the spirit; never the aesthetic man, the artist!
— Friedrich Nietzsche
What wings are to a bird, and sails to a ship, so is prayer to the soul.
— Corrie Ten Boom
— Corrie Ten Boom
Already at the origin of the species man was equal to what he was destined to become.
— Jean Rostand
The origin of civilization is man's determination to do nothing for himself which he can get done for him.
— H. C. Bailey
Eclecticism is the word. Like a jazz musician who creates his own style out of the styles around him, I play by ear.
— Ralph Ellison
A man is the origin of his action.
— Aristotle.