logo

Quotes About Interaction

I'm against people reading statements. When you read a statement, I automatically take it as though you can't talk, and it's not real.
~ Terry Bradshaw
You can't argue with the fools in the world. It's better to let them have their way, then trick them when they're not paying attention.
~ Terry Goodkind
Conversation itself has rules, which is why the conversationalist who insists that others must speak his language is a boor. To have a voice of one's own is to acknowledge other voices.
~ Terry Nardin
The degeneration of conversation into monologue, dogmatic assertion, is barbarism.
~ Terry Nardin
Our new attitude is how can we put you in front of our customer.
~ Terry Semel
Seems to me there are a million examples of how nice or how cruel people act every moment of every day.
~ Terry Trueman
We live in the world with you. We do not forsake forum or bath or workshop, or inn, or market, or any other place of commerce. We sail with you, fight with you, farm with you.
~ Tertullian
Hello, sucker!
~ Texas Guinan
The hunter handles his world with such care that he leaves no trail behind him. to leave a trail would be to become hunted by something more powerful than himself. The art of the hunter lies in his ability to choose both the timing and the location of his appearance. By doing this his interaction with the world becomes calculated and frugal, and thus the hunter avoids depleting both himself and the world around him.
~ Théun Mares
What's the longest you've been on a Twitter space
~ The Blonde Jon
The straight line is regarded as the shortest distance between two people, as if they were points.
~ Theodor W. Adorno
You can't expect the entire world to come to New York to see you. You have to travel to them.
~ Theodore Bikel
Writing is a communication.
~ Theodore Sturgeon
Why do you talk all the time?" I asked. It was a rhetorical question, but she cocked her head on one side and considered it carefully. "I think it's 'cause I don't know any big words, like you and Mummy," she said, just in time to pull me out of my magazine again, "so I have to use lots and lots of little ones.
~ Theodore Sturgeon
life could have been different if the meetings which have decided its course had been less silent, superficial or routine, if more thoughts had been exchanged, if humanity had been more able to show itself in them
~ Theodore Zeldin
I was in the Commons recently and saw a young lady wearing a nice pair of shoes. I said I liked them and she said my shoes were the reason she became involved in politics.
~ Theresa May
Spiritualism exits only for individuals. Reason is born when two men interact; addition of more and more members necessitates the spreading of the reason culminating as culture. Hence a culture is as dynamic as the reason. The nature of the reason is the nature of the spirit within for some and instinct for some others.
~ Thiruman Archunan
But I absolutely believe that architecture is a social activity that has to do with some sort of communication or places of interaction, and that to change the environment is to change behaviour.
~ Thom Mayne
The aesthetic of architecture has to be rooted in a broader idea about human activities like walking, relaxing and communicating. Architecture thinks about how these activities can be given added value.
~ Thom Mayne
Caroline was one of them people who utter three failures of judgment for every two words they speak, and by trying to correct them, you only succeed in presenting further occasion on which to exercise their vice, so I kept my remarks to the minimum. "So after
~ Thomas Berger
Everyone, he went on, speaks a language he does not understand, but which now and then is understood by others. That is enough to permit one to exist and at least to be misunderstood.
~ Thomas Bernhard
What is common to all of these examples is the way people's behavior depends on how many are behaving a particular way, or how much they are behaving that way—how many attend the seminar how frequently
~ Thomas C. Schelling
No man lives without jostling and being jostled; in all ways he has to elbow himself through the world, giving and receiving offense.
~ Thomas Carlyle
at no time in my life have I been a person to hold myself polluted by the touch or approach of any creature that wore a human shape: on the contrary, from my very earliest youth it has been my pride to converse familiarly, more Socratico, with all human beings, man, woman, and child, that chance might fling my way; a practice …. which becomes a man who would be a philosopher.
~ Thomas de Quincey