
Top 16 Raymond B. Cattell Quotes
#1. There is no substitute for the comfort supplied by the utterly taken-for-granted relationship.
Iris Murdoch
#2. If you're a beautiful Caucasian woman, and you commit a heinous crime, it's like people don't want to acknowledge the reality of your actions.
Alissa Nutting
#3. Another trick - calculated to lure a different, more sophisticated customer - was to bury a piece in the back of the store, reverse the vacuum cleaner over it (instant antiquity!) and allow the nosy customer to ferret it out on his or her own - look,
Donna Tartt
#4. Little princess, lovely as the dawn, well named Aurore.
Cameron Dokey
#5. But you come to a point in your life when you can't pull the trigger anymore.
Evel Knievel
#6. I will not be a traitor of God to please the whole world.
Mahatma Gandhi
#7. You spend a lot of time thinking about how awful the prison is rather than envisioning your future.
Piper Kernan
#8. Every father should remember one day his son will follow his example, not his advice.
Charles Kettering
#10. For anyone who is not white in America, the affronts are virtually across the board.
Randall Robinson
#11. [I] browsed far outside science in my reading and attended public lectures - Bertrand Russell, H. G. Wells, Huxley, and Shaw being my favorite speakers.
Raymond Cattell
#12. But psychology is a more tricky field, in which even outstanding authorities have been known to run in circles, 'describing things which everyone knows in language which no one understands'.
Raymond Cattell
#13. I'm very proud of our NHL players. I think they all handle themselves extremely well and they all work really hard.
Wayne Gretzky
#14. Next time there's a ball, ask me before someone else does, and not as a last resort!
J.K. Rowling
#15. The original Upper Paleolithic people would, if they appeared among us today, be called Caucasoid, in the sense that they lacked the particular traits we associate with Negroid and Mongoloid types.
Raymond Cattell
#16. Plato compared the intellect to a charioteer guiding the powerful horses of the passions, i.e., he gave it both the power of perception and the power of control.
Raymond Cattell
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