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Quotes About Whole

It has become impossible to give up the enterprise of disarmament without abandoning the whole great adventure of building up a collective peace system.
~ Arthur Henderson
Aberrations of the human mind are to a large extent due to the obsessional pursuit of some part-truth, treated as if it were a whole truth.
~ Arthur Koestler
A man shall see faces, that if you examine them part by part, you shall find never a good; and yet altogether do well. If it be true that the principal part of beauty is in decent motion, certainly it is no marvel, though persons in years seem many times more amiable; pulchrorum autumnus pulcher; for no youth can be comely but by pardon, and considering the youth, as to make up the comeliness.
~ bacon francis iii
I think there are some folks who don't particularly like what I have to say, but on the whole, the reaction has been very positive.
~ Daniel Woodrell
I don't need the fillers, additives, excessive amounts of sugars, fats, salts and other measures taken to taint the natural goodness of real food.
~ Mark Hyman
The perfect way for an angler who loves to cook to show off his fish is serving it whole, fresh off the grill, with crispy skin and moist flesh. Problem is, that's not usually how it happens.
~ Jonathan Miles
The rule I use is, If it doesn't come out of the ground looking the way it looks when you eat it, be careful.
~ Mehmet Oz
When I gave a direction to an actor in the show, I know their whole journey better than a guest director could know it.
~ Miriam Shor
Country ham is baked whole, usually with a glaze, sometimes studded with cloves, and served as the centerpiece of Christmas and Easter feasts.
~ Kate Christensen
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
~ The truth is the whole.
The good and wonderful thing about my whole career is that I've always felt that the audience, if I do it well, will track wherever I go, whether it's President or a lawyer or bad guy or good.
~ John Travolta
For me and accent work, I think once you've figured out where that energy is, where the sound is in your throat or your mouth, it's a whole lot easier to do.
~ Allison Tolman
When it comes to foods as we age, it is a good rule of thumb to focus on high-quality, whole, fresh foods as the basis of all your meals.
~ Denise Austin
Memory is most powerful when it is purposeful and selective. . . . [I]t requires that we possess stories and narratives that link facts in ways that are both meaningful and truthful, and provide a . . . way of knowing what facts are worth attending to. . . . We remember those things that fit a template of meaning, and point to a larger whole. We fail to retain the details that, like wandering orphans, have no connection to anything of abiding concern. . . . The design of our courses and
~ Sam Wineburg
Psychology is the science of the act of experiencing, and deals with the whole system of such acts as they make up mental life.
~ Samuel Alexander
I am not eternity, but a man; a part of the whole, as an hour is of the day.
~ Epictetus
Believe me, folks, I've been saying it for a long time. The system, the whole system is rigged.
~ Donald Trump
There would be a general reclaiming of fallen buttons and misplaced spectacles, of neighbors and kin, till time and error and accident were undone, and the world became comprehensible and whole.
~ Marilynne Robinson
If peace comes from seeing the whole, then misery stems from a loss of perspective.
~ Mark Nepo
Misery If peace comes from seeing the whole, then misery stems from a loss of perspective.
~ Mark Nepo
A tragedy is a representation of an action that is whole and complete and of a certain magnitude. A whole is what has a beginning and middle and end.
~ Aristotle
For the beginning is thought to be more than half of the whole, and many of the questions we ask are cleared up by it.
~ Aristotle
The proof that the state is a creation of nature and prior to the individual is that the individual, when isolated, is not self-sufficing; and therefore he is like a part in relation to the whole.
~ Aristotle
The truth is that, just as in the other imitative arts one imitation is always of one thing, so in poetry the story, as an imitation of action, must represent one action, a complete whole, with its several incidents so closely connected that the transposal or withdrawal of any one of them will disjoin and dislocate the whole. For that which makes no perceptible difference by its presence or absence is no real part of the whole.
~ Aristotle