I have very few hobbies. In fact, I have no hobbies.
If we carry this line of argument to its logical conclusion, the meaning of life consists of the flaws in one's conceptions and what one does about them. Life can be seen as a fertile fallacy.
Start by assuming the market is always wrong, so if you copy everybody else on Wall Street, you're doomed to do poorly.
When a long-term trend loses it’s momentum, short-term volatility tends to rise. It is easy to see why that should be so: the trend-following crowd is disoriented.
There is always a divergence between our perception and what actually exists.
I'm only rich because I know when I'm wrong.
My sense of insecurity keeps me alert, always ready to correct my errors.
I liked a lot of the scenes I did with Ryan Phillippe.
I am trying to be as impartial as possible. As you can tell from the trailers for Mad Men, I am a person who believes that you should know nothing.
Why does this magnificent applied science which saves work and makes life easier bring us so little happiness?. . . The simple answer runs: 'Because we have not yet learned to make sensible use of it. '
We still are America though. We're still a country that is a country of social mobility. We're still a country of immigrants. We're still a country with common ancestors. And reviving the civics of America and the idea that we're going to be united, at least not right now, but in some common future, and talking in that hopeful way that Martin Luther King did, that Abraham Lincoln did, seems to me that's the way.