Top 26 Quotes About World War 1 Technology
#1. While other founding fathers were reared in tidy New England villages or cosseted on baronial Virginia estates, Hamilton grew up in a tropical hellhole of dissipated whites and fractious slaves, all framed by a backdrop of luxuriant natural beauty. On
Ron Chernow
#2. The really big difference is that what you make with a molecular machine can be completely precise, down to the tiniest degree of detail that can exist in the world.
K. Eric Drexler
#3. The Mongol conquests are difficult to fathom. Although their most important technology was the horse, they conquered much of the known world from China to Europe, a series of wars that killed tens of millions of people, then a substantial chunk of the world's population.
Max Fisher
#4. I call God long-suffering and patient precisely because He permits evil in the world. I know that He has no evil in Him and yet if there is evil, He is the author of it and yet untouched by it.
Mahatma Gandhi
#5. I think as an artist you evoke feeling and change and through that you send a message.
Kristanna Loken
#6. Weapons and technology may help win wars, but it is only ideas that have the power to truly change the world.
Simon Adams
#7. What is needed now is a transformation of the major systems of production more profound than even the sweeping post-World War II changes in production technology.
Barry Commoner
#8. I guess high school really is ancient history, she concludes.
Ancient history? Have you really relegated us to the trash heap of the Dumb High-School Romance? And if that's the case, why the hell can't I do the same?
Gayle Forman
#9. This was more like it, a narrowed cluttered little shop stacked with books from floor to ceiling and four or five browsers taking their time- putting thumb marks on the new jackets. Nobody paid any attention to them.
Raymond Chandler
#10. Reading takes you on a wonderful journey to places you have probably never been. Sit back and enjoy your journey.
Marjorie Taylor
#11. His honor, rests in the very actions that led to his conviction and death. It is beyond your power to add to or detract from it.
Isaac Asimov
#12. Science and technology have been embarrassed by two world wars, many smaller ones, and the spread of weapons that could destroy humanity. As a result, there is some loss of confidence in the great achievements of technology.
Thomas Keating
#13. I'm a big comedy fan, and a fan of films.
Dan Scanlon
#14. If you look at the history of technology over a couple hundred years, it's all about time compression and making the globe smaller. It's had positive effects, all the ones that we know. So we're much less likely to have the kind of terrible misunderstandings that led to World War I, for example.
Eric Schmidt
#15. Americans worship technology. It's an inherent trait in the national zeitgeist.
Max Brooks
#16. I think artists almost always end up turning to what's around them, what's in their environment or outside their window.
Susan Rothenberg
#17. After World War II great strides were made in modern Japanese architecture, not only in advanced technology, allowing earthquake resistant tall buildings, but expressing and infusing characteristics of traditional Japanese architecture in modern buildings.
Harry Seidler
#18. All we were taught of geography was that the world had once been made up of seven continents and several countries, but a third world war demolished all but North America, the continent with the most advanced technology.
Lauren DeStefano
#19. World War II had a very important impact on the development of technology, as a whole.
Barry Commoner
#20. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants. We know more about war than we know about peace, more about killing than we know about living. We have grasped the mystery of the atom and rejected the Sermon on the Mount.
Omar Nelson Bradley
#21. A lot of manuscripts that come in, you wonder by what outrageous fantasy the author believes that this should be pressed into print.
Lawrence Ferlinghetti
#22. It takes one a long time to become young. - Picasso
Patsy Asuncion
#25. Developments in information technology and globalised media mean that the most powerful military in the history of the world can lose a war, not on the battlefield of dust and blood, but on the battlefield of world opinion.
Timothy Garton Ash
#26. Lawrence of Arabia, British Beatlemania.
Billy Joel
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