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| Link | Quote | Stars | Tags | Author |
| 0dbcb50 | But the truth is, I've never wanted to be a movie star - and I've been pretty clear about that. | Ethan Hawke | ||
| 692ab68 | Lost causes are the only causes worth fighting for. | Ethel Lina White | ||
| 1f859df | Broadway has been very good to me. But I've been very good to Broadway, too. | Ethel Merman | ||
| c9e1c82 | The more reality or being a thing has, the greater the number of its attributes. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| cd4fb66 | Nature abhors a vacuum. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 5285513 | Whatsoever is, is in God, and without God nothing can be, or be conceived. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 6c84f21 | God and all attributes of God are eternal. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| d2f6359 | Nothing exists from whose nature some effect does not follow. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 390c8ac | men judge of things according to their mental disposition, and rather imagine than understand... | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 341e298 | Thought is an attribute of God, or God is a thinking thing. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 1a6808b | Extension is an attribute of God, or God is an extended thing. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 2b73f76 | By reality and perfection I mean the same thing. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 9e7b5b0 | The order and connection of ideas is the same as the order and connection of things. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 59be5eb | Substance is in its nature infinite, immutable, indivisible... | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| f55e1de | Hence it follows, that man is constituted by certain modifications of the attributes of God. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 3cd7361 | The human mind does not involve an adequate knowledge of the parts of the human body. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 72f7577 | Will and Intellect are one and the same thing. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 8027082 | Everything, in so far as it is in itself, endeavors to persist in its own being. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| b19604a | Anything can, accidentally, be the cause of pleasure, pain, or desire. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 73828ed | He who conceives that the object of his hate is destroyed will feel pleasure. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| e619f82 | Pride is therefore pleasure arising from a man's thinking too highly of himself. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 535a70c | We cannot hate a thing which we pity, because its misery affects us painfully. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 0ed14a5 | We seek to free from misery, as far as we can, a thing which we pity. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 4514f38 | This hatred towards an object of love joined with envy is called Jealousy... | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 3ddde8c | He who conceives, that one whom he loves hates him, will be a prey to conflicting hatred and love. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 16577d5 | Anything whatever can be, accidentally, a cause of hope or fear. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 27933fc | The pain is more and more fostered, if a man conceives that he is blamed by others... | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 7961c64 | No one envies the virtue of anyone who is not his equal. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| a778f9d | Fear cannot be without hope nor hope without fear. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 4f12cff | No virtue can be conceived as prior to this endeavor to preserve one's own being. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 0e9fb29 | No one wishes to preserve his being for the sake of anything else. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| a80f100 | In so far as a thing is in harmony with our nature, it is necessarily good. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 4f6fa11 | In so far as men are assailed by emotions which are passions, they can be contrary one to another. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 8fde288 | In so far only as men live in obedience to reason, do they always necessarily agree in nature. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 02a3ba5 | Man is a social animal. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 0743fd4 | Whatsoever we desire from motives of hatred is base, and in a State unjust. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 51dce58 | The more we understand particular things, the more do we understand God. | Ethics (Spinoza book) | ||
| 8df955a | It is wrong always, everywhere, and for anyone, to believe anything upon insufficient evidence. | Ethics of belief | ||
| d0c00b9 | Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots? | Ethiopia | ||
| 9410be9 | Etiquette is a set of rules people use so they can be rude to each other in public. | Etiquette | ||
| dd38396 | The absence of hatred in no way implies the absence of moral indig\xadnation. | Etty Hillesum | ||
| ca9dd3c | It's a difficult deal, a deal for which only time will show if it is economically viable. | Euclid Tsakalotos | ||
| 32abe43 | The whole is greater than the part. | Euclid’s Elements | ||
| 8a6d2e5 | If you're so smart, why ain't you rich? | Eudora Welty |