Albert Einstein Independent Quotations
Albert Einstein Quotes about:
Independent Quotes from:
- All Independent Quotes
- Albert Einstein
- Maria Montessori
- Friedrich Nietzsche
- Thomas Jefferson
- Mahatma Gandhi
- Ayn Rand
- Bernie Sanders
- George Washington
- Henry David Thoreau
- Hillary Clinton
- Ada Lovelace
- Deepak Chopra
- Diane Von Furstenberg
- James Madison
- Milton Friedman
- Vladimir Putin
- Alexander Hamilton
- Billy Bob Thornton
- John Adams
- John F Kennedy
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Ideas Quotes
The theoretical idea ... does not arise apart from and independent of experience; nor can it be derived from experience by a purely logical procedure. It is produced by a creative act. Once a theoretical idea has been acquired, one does well to hold fast to it until it leads to an untenable conclusion.
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Men Quotes
The history of scientific and technical discovery teaches us that the human race is poor in independent and creative imagination. Even when the external and scientific requirements for the birth of an idea have long been there, it generally needs an external stimulus to make it actually happen; man has, so to speak, to stumble right up against the thing before the idea comes.
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Religious Quotes
While it is true that science, to the extent of its grasp of causative connections, may reach important conclusions as to the compatibility and incompatibility of goals and evaluations, the independent and fundamental definitions regarding goals and values remain beyond science's reach.
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Men Quotes
The more a man is imbued with the ordered regularity of all events the firmer becomes his conviction that there is no room left by the side of this ordered regularity for causes of a different nature. For him neither the rule of human nor the rule of divine will exist as an independent cause of natural events.
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Mean Quotes
The belief in an external world independent of the perceiving subject is the basis of all natural science. Since, however, sense perception only gives information of this external world or of "physical reality" indirectly, we can only grasp the latter by speculative means. It follows from this that our notions of physical reality can never be final. We must always be ready to change these notions - that is to say, the axiomatic basis of physics - in order to do justice to perceived facts in the most perfect way.
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