At the time I finished high school, I was determined to study biology, deeply convinced to eventually be a researcher.
I decided to teach because I think that any person who studies philosophy has to be involved actively.
The study of what is excellent is food for the mind and body.
You have to have conviction and completely question everything and anything you do. No matter how much you study, no matter how much you know, the side of your brain that has the smarts won't necessarily help you in making art.
True definition of science: the study of the beauty of the world.
The study of Buddhism is essentially the study of modification, how we modify the state of mind we're in, how we modify the realm we're in.
Friends, suffering, marriage, environment, study and recreation are influence which shape character. The strongest influence, if you are generous enough to yield to it, is the grace of God.
As to what I would like to be, it is difficult to say. An artist of some kind. If nothing else I shall always study the Arts.
Study Chairman Mao's writings, follow his teachings and act according to his instructions.
I am interested in study, reflection, philosophy - but always as a dilettante. I also consider myself a dilettante as a painter.
First I went to the Sorbonne to do my licence en lettres, but I also started to study law
There was a tsunami and there are terrible natural disasters, all of this because of too little Torah study.
Psychology is ultimately mythology, the study of the stories of the soul.
So study your rock history, son. That be the Bible of the Blues.
Beholding the bright countenance of truth in the quiet and still air of delightful studies.
In poetry, and in my study in graduate school, I was drawn to a particular poet, Theodore Roethke. I did a dissertation on "The Evolution of Matter and Spirit in the Poetry of Theodore Roethke" for my Ph. D.
He who would study nature in its wildness and variety, must plunge into the forest, must explore the glen, must stem the torrent, and dare the precipice.
Studying entrepreneurshi p without doing it. . . is like studying the appreciation of music without listening to it.
Michael Jackson loved studying the greats. He felt that they could only add to what he did naturally. He was absolutely right. I mean, he studied James Brown for years when he was 10 years old, because the Jackson 5 would open for James. He studied him. He studied Fred Astaire. He loved to watch Fred's movies.
We are at a point in our work when we can no longer ignore empires and the imperial context in our studies. (p. 5)