Quotes about Sense
The Dutch do have a slightly odd sense of humour.
— Bill Bailey
There is a purpose to our lives, even if it is sometimes hidden from us, and even if the biggest turning points and heartbreaks only make sense as we look back, rather than as we are experiencing them. So we might as well live life as if—as the poet Rumi put it—everything is rigged in our favor.
— Arianna Huffington
Generally, about all perception, we can say that a sense is what has the power of receiving into itself the sensible forms of things without the matter, in the way in which a piece of wax takes on the impress of a signet ring without the iron or gold.
— Aristotle
The 'fullness of reality' in the second sense of the term is perceived by a combination of both intellect and sense, the senses knowing the particular characteristics, the intellect knowing the nature.
— Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
Death. The end of sense-perception, of being controlled by our emotions, of mental activity, of enslavement to our bodies.
— Marcus Aurelius
A healthy human environment is one in which we try to make sense of our limits, of the accidents that can always befall us and the passage of time which inexorably changes us.
— Rowan Williams
One step at a time, over the years, as I sought to plumb the mystery of suffering (which cannot be plumbed), I began to see that there is a sense in which everything is a gift. Even my widowhood.
— Elisabeth Elliot
The search for meaning will fill you with a sense of meaning. Otherwise
— Anne Lamott
Whereas we are inclined to equate the reality and the sense of the reality, these are different things—there can be a reality of God's presence and activity whether we feel it or not, and we can have a sense of God's reality and activity but the sense may be false.)
— John Goldingay
Pain and blessings, deep wounds and healed scars, and, thank heaven, a God who could make sense of it all.
— Elizabeth Musser
She is to him the reality of romance, the leaner good sense of nonsense, the unveiling of his eyes, the freeing of his soul, the abolition of time, place and circumstance, the etherealization of his blood into rapturous rivers of the very water of life itself, the revelation of all the mysteries and the sanctification of all the dogmas.
— George Bernard Shaw
For they wished to fill the winepress of eloquence not with the tendrils of mere words but with the rich grape juice of good sense.
— Saint Jerome