Top 19 Quotes About Wrong Judgements
#1. But while the imaginations of other people will carry them away to form wrong judgements of our conduct, and to decide on it by slight appearances, one's happiness must in some measure be always at the mercy of chance.
Jane Austen
#2. Poor bastards," Cole said, his gaze still on the stars. "They must get pretty tired of watching us make the same damn mistakes all the time.
Maggie Stiefvater
#3. I didn't have enough voice left to scream. And it wasn't like anything was going to change. No matter how much I cried, even if I let myself yell, things were never going to get better.
Morgan Matson
#4. You are not normal. You never have been, and you never will be. Embrace who you are.
Tahereh Mafi
#5. When I'm hell-bent on something, there's no way around it. I can be a very stubborn.
Jeremy Scott
#6. She might be without country, without nation, but inside her there was still a being that could exist and be free, that could simply say I amwithout adding a this, or a that, without saying I am Indian, Guyanese, English, or anything else in the world.
Sharon Maas
#7. Judgements like "right" and "wrong"; only build barriers and encourage shame within individuals.
Rebecca Walker
#8. See more than your eyes can see.
Hear more than your ears can hear.
Do more than your hands can do.
Go further than your feet can go.
Matshona Dhliwayo
#9. What they never tell you about grief is that missing someone is the simple part.
Gail Caldwell
#10. You should never try and teach a pig to read for two reasons. First, it's impossible; and secondly, it annoys the hell out of the pig!.
Will Rogers
#11. Every step into freedom contains within it the potential for greater bondage.
Terence McKenna
#12. He who considers more deeply knows that, whatever his acts and judgements may be, he is always wrong.
Friedrich Nietzsche
#13. Most Americans probably aren't aware that there was a time in this country when tanks and cavalry were massed on Pennsylvania Avenue to chase away the unemployed.
Andy Grove
#14. The idea of a priori moral judgements ('It is morally wrong to inflict gratuitous pain') is completely acceptable to the vast majority of human beings. Only a few philosophers would disagree.
William Boyd
#15. Wasn't writing a kind of soaring, an achievable form of flight, of fancy, of the imagination?
Ian McEwan
#16. Yes, I think he even has a title. He's like son and heir.'
I turned her words over in my mind as I pretended to play with my phone.
Sun and hair
Son and heir
Sun and air
Olivia Sudjic
#17. This isn't like naming your dog Spot.
Moby
#18. It was, however, time to accept fear for what it was, an emotion that was preventing them from being who they needed to be.
Stephen Reid Andrews
#19. Nature, though. Nature always welcomed him. She passed no judgements, didn't care about right or wrong, guilt or innocence.
Peter Watts
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