“Everyone is always busy, not until it is something that benefits them, or that which concerns whom they love.”
Source: Sips And Little Portions
“Grown adults never try to fit into childhood clothes, then why should grown humans try to fit into tribal customs!”
Source: Sonnets From The Mountaintop
“Giving people information is like giving them a bunch of dots and letting them come to their own conclusion. 'Let the facts speak for themselves.' The problem is, they rarely do.”
Source: Business Storytelling from Hype to Hack: How Do Stories Work? Unlock the Software of the Mind
“Lack of rationality is a vice where thinking and feeling are called for—rationality is a vice where sensation and intuition should be trusted.”
Source: Modern Man in Search of a Soul
“Oh drop dead, I said, and walked out.”
“We are architects of our own loneliness, meticulously building walls from old wounds and broken trust. Yet, in the quietest hours, a part of us desperately prays for someone to be brave enough to dismantle them—not with force, but with understanding—and find the vulnerable heart we left trapped inside.”
“Beauty falls prey to the needs of the beholder, as their eyes are forever tainted by them.”
Source: Dream Fisher: A Metaphysical Work of Contemporary Fiction
“Every line of code carries two risks: one technical, one human.”
Source: The Art of Risk: How Smart Businesses Prevent Chaos Before It Happens
“In the first place, there is no such thing as ‘human nature’ in general, without further qualification, equally the same and invariable for all historical periods and classes.”
Source: Dialectical Materialism and Communism
“‘Human nature’ therefore changes together with the development of society and as long as society is divided into classes ‘human nature’ changes also with the classes to which its owners belong. The ‘nature’ of a capitalist is necessarily different from that of a Roman slave-holder or a feudal lord; and the ‘nature’ of a proletarian is again different, not only from that of a slave or a serf, but also from that of a bourgeois or a peasant of our own epoch.”
Source: Dialectical Materialism and Communism