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Quotes About Personality

I wonder if there's such a thing as a spiritual dentist? I think my whole personality is full of cavities!
~ Charles M. Schulz
In this era, there are all kinds of prakrutis (personality of the relative self), so how can it work without adjusting?
~ Dada Bhagwan
We have a strange and wonderful relationship - he's strange and I'm wonderful.
~ Mike Ditka
In our play we reveal what kind of people we are.
~ Ovid
We saw very little of the real Jack Buck behind the microphone. He would touch people in ways that we will never know. Jack was much more than just an announcer.
~ Ozzie Smith
How many people in the world is, each of them is individual. And I like to eat bread, somebody don't like that. You know this is the same in gymnastics.
~ Olga Korbut
We should take care not to make the intellect our god; it has, of course, powerful muscles, but no personality.
~ Albert Einstein
The really valuable thing in the pageant of human life seems to me not the political state, but the creative, sentient individual, the personality; it alone creates the noble and the sublime, while the herd as such remains dull in thought and dull in feeling.
~ Albert Einstein
Intellect has powerful muscles, but no personality.
~ Albert Einstein
No one can read the Gospels without feeling the actual presence of Jesus. His personality pulsates in every word. No myth is filled with such life... no man can deny the fact that Jesus existed, nor that his sayings are beautiful.
~ Albert Einstein
Most people say that it is the intellect which makes a great scientist. They are wrong: it is character.
~ Albert Einstein
Kebanyakan orang mengatakan bahwa kecerdasanlah yang melahirkan seorang ilmuwan besar. Mereka salah, karakterlah yang melahirkannya.
~ Albert Einstein
Science, however, cannot create ends and, even less, instill them in human beings; science, at most, can supply the means by which to attain certain ends. But the ends themselves are conceived by personalities with lofty ethical ideals and—if these ends are not stillborn, but vital and vigorous—are adopted and carried forward by those many human beings who, half unconsciously, determine the slow evolution of society.
~ Albert Einstein
I believe the most important mission of the state is to protect the individual and make it possible for him to develop into a creative personality.
~ Albert Einstein
It is abhorrent to me when a fine intelligence is paired with an unsavory character
~ Albert Einstein
Without creative, independently thinking and judging personalities the upward development of society is as unthinkable as the development of the individual personality without the nourishing soil of the community.
~ Albert Einstein
I'd rather be myself, he said. Myself and nasty. Not somebody else, however jolly.
~ Aldous Huxley
Successfully (whatever that may mean) or unsuccessfully, we all overact the part of our favorite character in fiction.
~ Aldous Huxley
When psychological education is less rudimentary that it is at present, people belonging to different types will recognize each other's right to exist. Every man will stick to the problems, inward or outward, with which nature has fitted him to deal; and he will restrained, if not by tolerance, at least by the salutary fear of making a fool of himself, from trespassing on the territory of minds belonging to another type.
~ Aldous Huxley
People are related to one another, not as total personalities, but as the embodiments of economic functions, or when they are not at work, as irresponsible seekers of entertainment. Subjected to this kind of life, individuals tend to feel lonely and insignificant. Their existence cases to have any point of meaning
~ Aldous Huxley
I'd rather be myself," he said. "Myself and nasty. Not somebody else, however jolly." "A
~ Aldous Huxley
I'd rather be myself...Myself and nasty. Not somebody else, however jolly.
~ Aldous Huxley
Reason is not the same in all men; human beings belong to a variety of psychological types separated one from another by irreducible differences.
~ Aldous Huxley
In real life there is no such person as the average man. There are only particular men, women and children, each with his or her inborn idiosyncrasies of mind and body, and all trying (or becoming compelled) to squeeze their biological diversities into the uniformity of some cultural mold.
~ Aldous Huxley