logo

Quotes About Humanity

She had an understanding about people, and compassion—she didn't talk about it, but you heard how she spoke and saw how she behaved.
~ Donald Spoto
self-organization is often sacrificed for purposes of short-term productivity and stability. Productivity and stability are the usual excuses for turning creative human beings into mechanical adjuncts to production processes. Or for narrowing the genetic variability of crop plants. Or for establishing bureaucracies and theories of knowledge that treat people as if they were only numbers.
~ Donella H. Meadows
I have known Nature. I have known Civilization. Civilization is better.
~ Donna Boyd
Saint Teresa of Ávila's Meditation "Christ has no body now, but yours. No hands, no feet on earth, but yours. Yours are the eyes through which Christ looks compassion into the world. Yours are the feet with which Christ walks to do good. Yours are the hands with which Christ blesses the world.… Let nothing trouble you, let nothing frighten you. All things are passing; God never changes. Patience obtains all things. He who possesses God lacks nothing: God alone suffices.
~ Donna-Marie Cooper O'Boyle
Lincoln had internalized the pain of those around him—the wounded soldiers, the captured prisoners, the defeated Southerners. Little wonder that he was overwhelmed at times by a profound sadness that even his own resilient temperament could not dispel.
~ Doris Kearns Goodwin
Kindness is the best form of humanity
~ Doris Lee
Trust no friend without faults, and love a woman, but no angel.
~ Doris Lessing
Anybody who knows anything knows how delicate and exacting a matter it is to try to tune in harmony two human beings, almost constitutionally out of tune even with themselves, full of strange complicated weaknesses and unexpected beauties and strength. Add to that the element of children, each of whom brings a full equipment of strange unexplored possiblities, and any fool can see that no outside complications are needed to make the problem a difficult one. "Marital Relations
~ Dorothy Canfield Fisher
Those who cannot see Christ in the poor are atheists indeed.
~ Dorothy Day
It is people who are important, not the masses.
~ Dorothy Day
We must practice the presence of God. He said that when two or three are gathered together, there he is in the midst of them. He is with us in our kitchens, at our tables, on our breadlines, with our visitors, on our farms. When we pray for our material needs, it brings us close to his humanity. He, too, needed food and shelter; he, too, warmed his hands at a fire and lay down in a boat to sleep.
~ Dorothy Day
Love your enemies." That is the hardest saying of all. Please, Father in heaven who made me, take away my heart of stone and give me a heart of flesh to love my enemy. It is a terrible thought – "we love God as much as the one we love the least.
~ Dorothy Day
The true atheist is the one who denies God's image in the "least of these.
~ Dorothy Day
Man is a being of varied, manifold and inconstant nature. And woman, by God, is a match for him.
~ Dorothy Dunnett
I have learned,' said Lymond, 'that kindness without love is no kindness.
~ Dorothy Dunnett
To the men exposed to his rule Lymond never appeared ill: he was never tired; he was never worried, or pained, or disappointed, or passionately angry. If he rested, he did so alone; if he slept, he took good care to sleep apart. "—I sometimes doubt if he's human," said Will, speaking his thought aloud. "It's probably all done with wheels.
~ Dorothy Dunnett
My son took many years to learn the simple truth. You cannot love any one person adequately until you have made friends with the rest of the human race also. Adult love demands qualities which cannot be learned living in a vacuum of resentment.
~ Dorothy Dunnett
What are you to do with the people who are cursed with both hearts and brains?
~ Dorothy L. Sayers
deny Black humanity in order to rationalize white supremacy.3
~ Dorothy Roberts
we can love someone without understanding that person.
~ Dorothy Rowe
One of the great joys of living as a slut is the opportunity to make intimate connections with people whose background is unlike your own. When you do that, you will find yourself tripping, with some embarrassment, over a lot of differences. This process can feel awkward, but every time it happens, you've learned something new about how people go about being human—perhaps just the thing that was lacking in your own culture.
~ Dossie Easton
2,000 years ago one man got nailed to a tree for saying how great it would be if everyone was nice to each other for a change.
~ Douglas Adams
I am fascinated by religion. (That's a completely different thing from believing in it!) It has had such an incalculably huge effect on human affairs. What is it? What does it represent? Why have we invented it? How does it keep going? What will become of it? I love to keep poking and prodding at it. I've thought about it so much over the years that that fascination is bound to spill over into my writing.
~ Douglas Adams
Beethoven tells you what it's like to be Beethoven and Mozart tells you what it's like to be human. Bach tells you what it's like to be the universe.
~ Douglas Adams