“Desires dictate our priorities, priorities shape our choices, and choices determine our actions.”
Dallin H. Oaks (1932) Apostle of the LDs Church
Desire https://www.lds.org/general-conference/2011/04/desire, Dallin H. Oaks, April 2011
Source: The Dream Hunter
“Desires dictate our priorities, priorities shape our choices, and choices determine our actions.”
Dallin H. Oaks (1932) Apostle of the LDs Church
Desire https://www.lds.org/general-conference/2011/04/desire, Dallin H. Oaks, April 2011
“We must never forget that it is through our actions, words, and thoughts that we have a choice.”
Sogyal Rinpoche (1947–2019) Tibetan Dzogchen lama of the Nyingma tradition
“Our ability to destroy ourselves is the mirror image of our ability to save ourselves”
Terence McKenna (1946–2000) American ethnobotanist
Psychedelic Society (1984)
Context: Our ability to destroy ourselves is the mirror image of our ability to save ourselves, and what is lacking is the clear vision of what should be done... What needs to be done is that fundamental, ontological conceptions of reality need to be redone. We need a new language, and to have a new language we must have a new reality... A new reality will generate a new language, a new language will fix a new reality, and make it part of this reality.
“Our lives are fashioned by our choices. First we make our choices. Then our choices make us.”
Anne Frank (1929–1945) victim of the Holocaust and author of a diary
Jacques Barzun (1907–2012) Historian
Source: Bernard Shaw in Twilight (1943), IV
Context: He never invested his whole moral capital in a man, a book, or a cause, but treasured up wisdom wherever it could be picked up, always with scrupulous acknowledgment … His eclecticism saving him from the cycle of hope-disillusion-despair, his highest effectiveness was as a skirmisher in the daily battle for light and justice, as a critic of new doctrine and a refurbisher of old, as a voice of warning and encouragement. That his action has not been in vain, we can measure by how little Shaw's iconoclasm stirs our blood; we no longer remember what he destroyed that was blocking our view.
Leó Szilárd (1898–1964) Physicist and biologist
As quoted in "Some Szilardisms on War, Fame, Peace", LIFE magazine, Vol. 51, no. 9 (1 September 1961), p. 79
Context: It is not necessary to succeed in order to persevere. As long as there is a margin of hope, however narrow, we have no choice but to base all our actions on that margin. America and Russia have one interest in common which may override all their other interests: to be able to live with the bomb without getting into an all-out war that neither of them wants.
Jean Paul Sartre (1905–1980) French existentialist philosopher, playwright, novelist, screenwriter, political activist, biographer, and …