Quotes about Principles
You can do whatever you want to do as long as it is correct according to your conscience and heart.
— Robin Sharma
The character ethic, which I believe to be the foundation of success, teaches that there are basic principles of effective living, and that people can only experience true success and enduring happiness as they learn and integrate these principles into their basic character.
— Stephen Covey
Applying the axioms of physical science to human life has something reprehensible to it.
— Albert Einstein
It's a lot more interesting to learn and discover real-life principles when they are revealed in the form of a story.
— Andy Andrews
Truly a legend in our time, John Templeton understands that the real measure of a person's success in life is not financial accomplishment but moral integrity and inner character.
— Billy Graham
Only a man's character is the real criterion of worth.
— Eleanor Roosevelt
The precepts of the law may be comprehended under these three points: to live honestly, to hurt no man willfully, and to render every man his due carefully.
— Aristotle
To be the friend of the one, is of necessity to be the enemy of the other. I love the pure, peaceable, and impartial Christianity of Christ: I therefore hate the corrupt, slaveholding, women-whipping, cradle-plundering, partial and hypocritical Christianity of this land.
— Frederick Douglass
Broadmindedness, when it means indifference to right and wrong, eventually ends in a hatred of what is right.
— Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
There are ultimately only two possible adjustments to life; one is to suit our lives to principles; the other is to suit principles to our lives. If we do not live as we think, we soon begin to think as we live. The method of adjusting moral principles to the way men live is just a perversion of the order of things.
— Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
Moral principles do not depend on a majority vote. Wrong is wrong, even if everybody is wrong. Right is right, even if nobody is right.
— Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
Facts in our day are not the same as the facts in the time of Aristotle or Thomas Aquinas. But the principles by which these facts are interpreted have not changed, for common sense remains essentially the same throughout the ages.
— Bishop Fulton J. Sheen