
Top 15 Georges Moustaki Quotes
#1. The danger from computers is not that they will eventually get as smart as men, but that we will meanwhile agree to meet them halfway.
Bernard Avishai
#2. The second advantage claimed for naturalism is that it is equivalent to rationality, because it assumes a model of reality in which all events are in principle accessible to scientific investigation.
Phillip E. Johnson
#4. It is my supposition that the Universe in not only queerer than we imagine, is queerer than we can imagine.
John B. S. Haldane
#5. Before you act, think.
Before you speak, listen.
Before you take, give.
Before you scorn, empathize.
Before you condemn, forgive.
Before you wound, love.
Matshona Dhliwayo
#6. Look, you can date whoever you want and I will totally support you. I am all about support. Support is my middle name."
"So that's why you never told me your middle name. I figured it was something embarrassing.
Cassandra Clare
#7. But more than anything ... thank you for loving me. Thank you for your dimpled smile and your bottle caps.
Gail McHugh
#8. If the history of medicine is told through the stories of doctors, it is because their contributions stand in place of the more substantive heroism of their patients. I
Siddhartha Mukherjee
#9. It's precisely in those moments when I don't know what to do, boredom drives one to try a host of possibilities to either get somewhere or not get anywhere.
Anish Kapoor
#10. The right to a good death is a basic human freedom. The [2006-JAN] Supreme Court's decision to uphold aid in dying allows us to view and act on death as a dignified moral and godly choice for those suffering with terminal illnesses.
John Shelby Spong
#11. The overintellectualization of surrealism can be a bromide. A dream interpreted is a deflated dream.
Graham Joyce
#12. I think we should be passionately curious about what we do.
Mariel Hemingway
#14. Machines, he said, are an effect of art, which is nature's ape, and they reproduce not its forms but the operation itself.
Umberto Eco
#15. Poverty is the fundamental cause of most of the physical, moral and economic ills of humanity.
Helen Keller
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