Quotes about Perception
What a difference! Under the esthetic sky, everything is buoyant, beautiful, transient! when ethics arrives on the scene, everything becomes harsh, angular and infinitely boring
— Soren Kierkegaard
So many believe that it is love that grows, but it is the knowing that grows and love simply expands to contain it.
— William Paul Young
He who hunts for flowers will finds flowers; and he who loves weeds will find weeds.
— Henry Ward Beecher
I'm half living my life between reality and fantasy at all times.
— Lady Gaga
Everyone has come to understand that unconditional love is a reality, but with as shelf life of about eight to ten seconds.
— Anne Lamott
Because the world is revealed, to an indeterminate degree, through the template of your values. If the world you are seeing is not the world you want, therefore, it's time to examine your values. It's time to rid yourself of your current presuppositions. It's time to let go. It might even be time to sacrifice what you love best, so that you can become who you might become, instead of statiny who you are.
— Jordan Peterson
What we perceive, when things fall apart, is no longer the stage and settings of habitable order. It's the eternal watery tohu va bohu, formless emptiness, and the tehom, the abyss, to speak biblically—the chaos forever lurking beneath our thin surfaces of security.
— Jordan Peterson
Beauty soon grows familiar to the lover, fades in his eye, and palls upon the sense.
— Joseph Addison
Were all the vexations of life put together, we should find that a great part of them proceed from those calumnies and reproaches we spread abroad concerning one another.
— Joseph Addison
And even the greatest actions of a celebrated person labour under this disadvantage, that however surprising and extraordinary they may be, they are no more than what are expected from him; but on the contrary, if they fall any thing below the opinion that is conceived of him, though they might raise the reputation of another, they are a diminution to his.
— Joseph Addison
A man that has a taste of music, painting, or architecture, is like one that has another sense, when compared with such as have no relish of those arts.
— Joseph Addison
What an absurd thing it is to pass over all the valuable parts of a man, and fix our attention on his infirmities.
— Joseph Addison