Best 5587 quotes in «knowledge quotes» category

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    Learning is an active process. We learn by doing.. Only knowledge that is used sticks in your mind.

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    Learning is all about connections, and through our connections with unique people we are able to gain a true understanding of the world around us.

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    Learning is the process whereby knowledge is created through the transformation of experience

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    Learning is not the accumulation of knowledge. Learning is movement from moment to moment.

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    Learn something new. Try something different. Convince yourself that you have no limits.

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    Learn to hide your need and show your skill.

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    Learn the leading precognita of all things-no need to turn over leaf by leaf, but grasp the trunk hard and you will shake all the branches. Advice cherished by Samuel Johnson that that, if one is to master any subject, one must first discover its general principles.

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    Leisure and curiosity might soon make great advances in useful knowledge, were they not diverted by minute emulation and laborious trifles.

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    Let fools the studious despise, There's nothing lost by being wise.

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    Let it be your maxim through life, to know all you can know, yourself; and never to trust implicitly to the information of others.

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    Let me always remember that it is not the amount of religious knowledge which I have, but the amount which I use, that determines my religious position and character.

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    Let no Body be afrighted, because so many things are to be learnt, when the learning of them will be so pleasant; how profitable I need not tell you.

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    Let no knowledge satisfy but that which lifts above the world, which weans from the world, which makes the world a footstool.

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    Let no one be deluded that a knowledge of the path can substitute for putting one foot in front of the other.

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    Let the bird sing without deciphering the song.

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    Let us not go hurrying about and collecting honey, bee-like buzzing here and there for a knowledge of what is not to be arrived at, but let us open our leaves like a flower, and be passive and receptive, budding patiently under the eye of Apollo, and taking hints from every noble insect that favours us with a visit - sap will be given us for meat and dew for drink.

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    Let us, then, take our compass; we are something, and we are not everything. The nature of our existence hides from us the knowledge of first beginnings which are born of the nothing; and the littleness of our being conceals from us the sight of the infinite. Our intellect holds the same position in the world of thought as our body occupies in the expanse of nature.

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    Let us see how high we can fly before the sun melts the wax in our wings.

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    Liberalism regards all absolutes with profound skepticism, including both moral imperatives and final solutions... Insistence upon any particular solution is the mark of an ideologue.

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    Liberty cannot be preserved without general knowledge among the people.

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    Life can give everything to whoever tries to understand and is willing to receive new knowledge.

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    Life is not a thing of knowing only--nay, mere knowledge has properly no place at all save as it becomes the handmaiden of feeling and emotions.

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    Like buried treasures, the outposts of the universe have beckoned to the adventurous from immemorial times. Princes and potentates, political or industrial, equally with men of science, have felt the lure of the uncharted seas of space, and through their provision of instrumental means the sphere of exploration has made new discoveries and brought back permanent additions to our knowledge of the heavens.

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    Like many women my age, I am 28 years old.

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    Linguistic danger to spiritual freedom.- Every word is a prejudice.

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    Logic doesn't apply to the real world.

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    Loneliness is not cured by human company. Loneliness is cured by contact with reality.

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    Logic is invincible, because in order to combat logic it is necessary to use logic.

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    Long enough I had heard of irrelevant things; now at length I was glad to make acquaintance with the light that dwells in rotten wood. Where is all your knowledge gone to? It evaporates completely, for it has no depth.

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    Logic is the anatomy of thought.

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    Man, being the servant and interpreter of Nature, can do and understand so much and so much only as he has observed in fact or thought of the course of nature; beyond this he neither knows anything nor can do anything.

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    Love is active penetration of the other person, in which my desire to know is stilled by union. In the act of fusion I know you, I know myself, I know everybody - and I "know" nothing.

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    Man has an intense desire for assured knowledge.

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    Losing an illusion makes you wiser than finding a truth.

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    Management means, in the last analysis, the substitution of thought for brawn and muscle, of knowledge for folkways and superstition, and of cooperation for force. It means the substitution of responsibility for obedience to rank, and of authority of performance for the authority of rank.

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    Man cannot live without some knowledge of the purpose of life. If he can find no purpose in life he creates one in the inevitability of death.

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    Man is made of the same atoms the world is, he shares the same impressions, predispositions, and destiny. When his mind is illuminated, when his heart is kind, he throws himself joyfully into the sublime order, and does, with knowledge, what the stones do by structure.

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    Man is fed with fables through life, and leaves it in the belief he knows something of what has been passing, when in truth he knows nothing but what has passed under his own eyes.

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    Man often acquires just so much knowledge as to discover his ignorance, and attains so much experience as to regret his follies, and then dies.

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    Manners must adorn knowledge and smooth its way in the world, without them it is like a great rough diamond, very well in a closet by way of curiosity, and also for its intrinsic value; but most prized when polished.

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    Many a man who has known himself at ten forgets himself utterly between ten and thirty.

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    Many errors, of a truth, consist merely in the application of the wrong names of things.

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    Man is a strange animal, he doesn't like to read the handwriting on the wall until his back is up against it.

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    Man never knows what he wants; he aspires to penetrate mysteries and as soon as he has, wants to re-establish them. Ignorance irritates him and knowledge cloys.

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    Man, whose organization is regarded as the highest, departs from the vertebrate archetype; and it is because the study of anatomy is usually commenced from, and often confined to, his structure, that a knowledge of the archetype has been so long hidden from anatomists.

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    Many men are stored full of unused knowledge. Like loaded guns that are never fired off, or military magazines in times of peace, they are stuffed with useless ammunition.

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    Many people think of knowledge as money, They would like knowledge, but do not want to face the perseverance and self- denial that goes into the acquisition of it.

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    Mathematicians have sought knowledge in figures, Philosophers in systems, Logicians in subtleties, and Metaphysicians in sounds. It is not in any nor in all of these. He that studies only men, will get the body of knowledge without the soul, and he that studies only books, the soul without the body.

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    [Marriage is] like signing a 356-page contract without knowing what's in it.

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    [Mathematics] is security. Certainty. Truth. Beauty. Insight. Structure. Architecture. I see mathematics, the part of human knowledge that I call mathematics, as one thing - one great, glorious thing. Whether it is differential topology, or functional analysis, or homological algebra, it is all one thing. ... They are intimately interconnected, they are all facets of the same thing. That interconnection, that architecture, is secure truth and is beauty. That's what mathematics is to me.