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Quotes About Essence

I love things that cost nothing that have great results.
~ Stephen A. Schwarzman
The great thing about Stephen is that he sees the movie as a separate thing, I think. He wants it to capture the essence of the book, and if he feels that's been done, then he's not too particular about the details. I think that's why he's happy.
~ Lawrence Kasdan
The place does not make the man, nor the sceptre the king. Greatness is from within.
~ Robert Green Ingersoll
I learned a lot about Ottoman court, and it was very Shakespearian in essence. Stories like the one in 'Hamlet' did happen several times in the 500 years of Ottoman history.
~ Haris Pasovic
You may call me Mogget. As to what I am, I was once many things, but now I am only several.
~ Garth Nix
If we were to give the imagination its due in the philosophical systems of the universe, we should find, at their very source, an adjective. Indeed, to those who want to find the essence of a world philosophy, one could give the following advice-look for its adjective.
~ Gaston Bachelard
Every object in the world, loved for its own sake, has a right to its own nothingness. Every being pours out being, a little of its being, the shadow of its being, into its own non-being.
~ Gaston Bachelard
Family is in essence a small nation, and the nation a large family. In treating his own family with dignity, a ruler learns to govern his nation with dignity
~ Gene Luen Yang
You must know that for certain simples to attain their highest virtues they must be pulled from grave soil by moonlight.
~ Gene Wolfe
Take yourself in. Ask the questions no one ever asked you. Keep going until you know the answer and you know who's asking. Until you realize- it's not far away- that the essence of you, like the sky, was always here. You just happened to get distracted by the local weather for a few decades.
~ Geneen Roth
The significance of that 'absolute commandment', know thyself — whether we look at it in itself or under the historical circumstances of its first utterance — is not to promote mere self-knowledge in respect of the particular capacities, character, propensities, and foibles of the single self. The knowledge it commands means that of man's genuine reality — of what is essentially and ultimately true and real — of spirit as the true and essential bein
~ Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
Public opinion contains all kinds of falsity and truth, but it takes a great man to find the truth in it. The great man of the age is the one who can put into words the will of his age, tell his age what its will is, and accomplish it. What he does is the heart and the essence of his age, he actualizes his age. The man who lacks sense enough to despise public opinion expressed in gossip will never do anything great.
~ Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
The real is the rational, and the rational is the real.
~ Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
In heaven an angel is no one in particular.
~ George Bernard Shaw
I can't turn your soul on. Leave me those feelings; and you can take away the voice and the face. They are not you.
~ George Bernard Shaw
I have my own soul. My own spark of divine fire.
~ George Bernard Shaw
That is beautiful mysticism, it is a—" "Please not to call it by any name," said Dorothea, putting out her hands entreatingly. "You will say it is Persian, or something geographical. It is my life. I have found it out and cannot part with it.
~ George Eliot
The story can be told without many words.
~ George Eliot
He has got no good red blood in his body, said Sir James. No. Somebody put a drop under a magnifying glass, and it was all semicolons and parentheses, said Mrs. Cadwallader.
~ George Eliot
That is a beautiful mysticism - it is a - ' 'Please not to call it by any name,' said Dorothea, putting out her hands entreatingly. 'You will say it is Persian, or something else geographical. It is my life. I have found it out, and cannot part with it.
~ George Eliot
But in that curious compound, the feminine character, it may easily happen that the flavor is unpleasant in spite of excellent ingredients;
~ George Eliot
Thus, an instruction to see the moon as irregular, as asymmetrical, is an instruc- tion to see, metaphorically, that the essence of the divine, which the church is to serve and protect, is not the abstract, perfect, lifeless doctrine of the institution, but rather real, imperfect, vital beings.
~ George Lakoff
Why need I volumes, if one word suffice?
~ Ralph Waldo Emerson
The words of my book nothing, the drift of it everything.
~ Walt Whitman