Quotes about Judgment
Remember everything is right until it's wrong. You'll know when it's wrong.
— Ernest Hemingway
Coward," Pablo said bitterly. "You treat a man as coward because he has a tactical sense. Because he can see the results of an idiocy in advance. It is not cowardly to know what is foolish." "Neither is it foolish to know what is cowardly," said Anselmo, unable to resist making the phrase.
— Ernest Hemingway
How good a book is should be judged by the man who writes it by the excellence of the material that he eliminates.
— Ernest Hemingway
He liked the works of his friends, which is beautiful as loyalty but can be disastrous as judgment.
— Ernest Hemingway
Let them all go to hell, except the people, and then, when they come to power, we must be dam cautious to see what they will become.
— Ernest Hemingway
While public opinion might sway back and forth, right and wrong do not.
— Andy Andrews
Have you ever considered how often we judge ourselves by our intentions while we judge others by their actions? Yet intention without action is an insult to those who expect the best from you.
— Andy Andrews
He did, however, put in me the ability to make a decision and then make it right.
— Andy Andrews
Have you ever considered how often we judge ourselves by our intentions while we judge others by their actions? Yet intention without action is an insult to those who expect the best from you. 'I intended to bring you flowers, but I didn't.' 'I meant to finish this work on time.' 'I was going to be there for your birthday.
— Andy Andrews
Our definition of wisdom? The ability to see into the future the consequences of your choices in the present.
— Andy Andrews
you will never please everyone, nor should pleasing everyone be your goal. For example, to seek the approval of someone who is lazy or jealous is to cast your pearls before swine. You will find that God rarely uses a person whose main concern is what others are thinking.
— Andy Andrews
Every decision you ever made — the best ones and the worst ones — were, at their base, merely a product of your thinking at that time.
— Andy Andrews