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Quotes about Perception

It seems to me probable that of all our economic life the element on which we are inclined to place too low an estimate is advertising.
— Calvin Coolidge
The worst evils of life are those which do not exist except in our imagination.
— Charles Spurgeon
We awaken in others the same attitude of mind we hold toward them.
— Elbert Hubbard
A trait no other nation seems to possess in quite the same degree that we do -- namely, a feeling of almost childish injury and resentment unless the world as a whole recognizes how innocent we are of anything but the most generous and harmless intentions.
— Eleanor Roosevelt
Perhaps the most essential thing for a continuing education is to develop the capacity to know what you see and to understand what it means. Many people seem to go through life without seeing.
— Eleanor Roosevelt
Someone who always has to lie discovers that every one of his lies is true.
— Elias Canetti
Countless things in our daily lives can awaken the almost constant state of wonder we knew as children. But sometimes to see them we must look through a different set of eyes.
— Arianna Huffington
I think that when people hear the president [George W. Bush] speak, frankly, they think he's really stupid. But what people don't realize is that there's a genius behind that stupidity, and that genius is Harlan McCraney.
— Arianna Huffington
Shame is an ornament to the young; a disgrace to the old.
— Aristotle
Time is not composed of indivisible nows any more than any other magnitude is composed of indivisibles.
— Aristotle
Generally, about all perception, we can say that a sense is what has the power of receiving into itself the sensible forms of things without the matter, in the way in which a piece of wax takes on the impress of a signet ring without the iron or gold.
— Aristotle
To those who cite the disreputable sorts of pleasure one may fairly reply that these are not really pleasant. For we ought not, because they are pleasant to the wrongly disposed, to think they are generally pleasant, or to any but these; just as things that are wholesome or sweet or bitter to the sick, are not so to all, and as things are not really white that seem so to those suffering from opthalmia.
— Aristotle