
Top 15 Evaluative Mediation Quotes
#1. What Cicero said of men-that they are like wines, age souring the bad, and bettering the good-we can say of misfortune, that it has the same effect upon them.
Jean Paul
#2. They say when you look in dark places you find dark things.
And trust me; I have been in some very dark places.
Sean Catt
#3. True warfare in which large rival armies fight to the death is known only in man and in social insects.
Richard Dawkins
#4. I always want to be a messenger, a person that, you know, that's not afraid to pass on wisdom.
Mary J. Blige
#5. What do you do when Mom leaves you alone like this? (Kat)
I write romance novels. (Acheron)
Sherrilyn Kenyon
#6. The demand for money is regulated entirely by its value, and its value by its quantity.
David Ricardo
#7. Tears stung her eyes. She sank her knees next to the sleeping bench and gently raked strands of golden hair from him forehead.
"Don't you die. don't you dare. I forbid it." As if Han Alister had ever listened to anything she said.
Cinda Williams Chima
#8. I'm no good at cooking or music, but I've always known how to garden. Nobody ever taught me; I just absorbed it. Some families are churchgoers or sports fans. We gardened.
Thalassa Cruso
#9. Universe will be a very small place once we solve our speed problem! When that day comes, no man will talk about the greatness of the universe! All greatness comes from our smallness and from our slowness!
Mehmet Murat Ildan
#10. History is important because it teaches us about the past. And bylearning about the past, you come to understand the present, so that you may make educated decisions about the future.
Richelle Mead
#11. Backed into a corner, the poor can riot, but the rich start war.
Stefan Petrucha
#13. Nobody drowns by falling in the water ... but by staying there.
Shiv Khera
#14. In his final years of life, Hopkins took to the lecture circuit. His talks on the "Laws of Scientific Advertising" attracted thousands of people.
Charles Duhigg
#15. What is called "objectivity," scientific for instance (in which I firmly believe, in a given situation) imposes itself only within a context which is extremely vast, old, firmly established, or rooted in a network of conventions ... and yet which still remains a context.
Jacques Derrida
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