
Top 13 Tsuyoshi Ihara Quotes
#1. In a word, it was impossible for me to separate her, in the past or in the present, from the innermost life of my life.
Charles Dickens
#2. We are the lucky ones for we shall die, as there is an infinite number of possible forms of DNA all but a few billions of which will never burst into consciousness.
Frank Close
#3. In the songs that I write, that's where I get to be really brave and outspoken.
Emily Kinney
#4. The '60s was the end of the America that the rest of the world liked.
Julie Newmar
#5. Between life's stimuli and our habitual responses exists choice.
Ken Wilber
#6. I remembered when my oldest brother married Malgosia, and suddenly the two of them stopped running around with us and started sitting with the parents: a very solemn kind of alchemy, one that I felt shouldn't have been able to just sneak up on me.
Naomi Novik
#7. What is without us has no connection with happiness, only so far as the preservation of our lives and health depends upon it ... Happiness springs immediately from the mind.
Benjamin Franklin
#8. With Vietman, we found ourselves involved there before we really understood what was going on.
Bob Schieffer
#9. It seems to me that the students are now half-awake enough to try and wake up their brother workers. If you don't pass on your own awareness then it closes down again.
John Lennon
#10. A person who has read widely but not well deserves to be pitied rather than praised. As
Mortimer J. Adler
#11. Hegel, installed from above, by the powers that be, as the certified Great Philosopher, was a flat-headed, insipid, nauseating, illiterate charlatan who reached the pinnacle of audacity in scribbling together and dishing up the craziest mystifying nonsense.
Arthur Schopenhauer
#12. So, believe in that. Believe in my charmed life. Believe that I always get whatever I want. Because I want you in my life, Laura. For as long as you want to stay. When you're too scared to believe in anything else, you can believe in that. (Cade to Laura)
Lori Ryan
#13. There is no silence without a cry of grief, no forgiveness without bloodshed, no acceptance without a passage of acute loss.
Haruki Murakami
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