Quotes about Integration
The whole is more than the sum of its parts.
— Aristotle
We budget quite a bit of money every year in order to assist people who are migrating here, people who are trying to enter into our society and be a part of the American dream.
— Blase J. Cupich
Do you know what integration really means? It means intermarriage. That's the real point behind it. You can't have it without intermarriage. And that would result in disintegration of both races.
— Malcolm X
Almost always, great new ideas don't emerge from within a single person or function, but at the intersection of functions or people that have never met before.
— Clayton M. Christensen
People, and especially theologians, should try to familiarize themselves with scientific ideas. Of course, science is technical in many respects, but there are some very good books that try to set out some of the conceptual structure of science.
— John Polkinghorne
Part of my life's thesis is that we live in a culture that has bought into the patently silly idea that there is a divide between the secular world and the faith world.
— Eric Metaxas
Our slave foreparents would have been put to death for advocating so-called 'integration' with the white man. Now when Mr. Muhammad speaks of 'separation,' the white man calls us 'hate-teachers' and 'fascists'!
— Malcolm X
Everything is interwoven, and the web is holy; none of its parts are unconnected. They are composed harmoniously, and together they compose the world. One world, made up of all things. One divinity, present in them all.
— Marcus Aurelius
That you are part of nature, and no one can prevent you from speaking and acting in harmony with it, always.
— Marcus Aurelius
Through the universal Substance as through a rushing torrent all bodies pass on their way, united with the Whole in nature and activity, as our members are with one another.
— Marcus Aurelius
Walking into the crowd was like sinking into a stew - you became an ingredient, you took on a certain flavour.
— Margaret Atwood
A house divided against itself could not stand.
— Margaret Atwood