Self Theory Quotes
Collection of top 25 famous quotes about Self Theory
Self Theory Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Self Theory quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
The self can be as desperately stranded in the transcendence of theory as in the immanence of consumption.
— Walker Percy
The Bible, I've said it before, is a beautifully written work of fiction.
— Janeane Garofalo
On the way from mythology to logistics thought has lost the element of self-reflection and today machinery disables men even as it nurtures them.
— Theodor W. Adorno
The public library is a center of public happiness first, of public education next.
— John Cotton Dana
People who always arrive early aren't worth waiting for.
— Crystal Woods
I have a theory that self-made, first-generation actresses don't feel entitled to success.
— Natasha Lyonne
Shannon's most radical insight was that meaning was irrelevant.
— William Poundstone
Every theory is a self-fulfilling prophecy that orders experience into the framework it provides.
— Ruth Hubbard
Self-deception is an exotic theory, because it makes the paradoxical claim that something called "the self" can be both deceiver and deceived.
— Steven Pinker
I have a 100-mile round trip commute on some of the nations' busiest roads and enjoy every minute of it.
— Henrik Fisker
People who've suffered don't have time to grumble.
— Eva Ibbotson
Human beings seem to be far more autonomous and self-governed than modern psychological theory allows for.
— Abraham Maslow
Mute the venomous self-talk in your mind. Eliminate the poisonous theory of, "Same Crap, Different Day." Today is a new day - make it count!
— Steve Maraboli
My theory is this: Women falter when they're called on to be highly self-conscious about their talents. Not when they're called on to enact them.
— Meghan O'Rourke
I do not think much of the good luck theory of self-made men. It is worth but little attention and has no practical value.
— Frederick Douglass
I'll call you mine.
— Maya Banks
There is no rest for the humble except in despising the great, whose only thought of the people is inspired by self-interest or sadism.
— Louis-Ferdinand Celine