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Quotes about Facts

I cannot marry the facts of William Shakespeare to his verse: Other men had led lives in some sort of keeping with their thought, but this man is in wide contrast.
— Ralph Waldo Emerson
Time dissipates to shining ether the solid angularity of facts.
— Ralph Waldo Emerson
The reliance on authority measures the decline of religion, the withdrawal of the soul. The position men have given to Jesus, now for many centuries of history, is a position of authority. It characterizes themselves. It cannot alter the eternal facts.
— Ralph Waldo Emerson
The denial of Christ has less to do with facts and more to do with the bent of what a person is prejudiced to conclude.
— Ravi Zacharias
In the postmodernist mentality the purpose of dialogue or debate is not for truth but only for feeling, and as passion has taken over, facts are given no legitimacy. The result is hate-filled shouting matches.
— Ravi Zacharias
But He did say, in effect, that if you test His claims by the same measure that you legitimately substantiate other facts, you will find HIm and His teaching thoroughly trustworthy.
— Ravi Zacharias
Last night in the latrine. Didn't you whisper that we couldn't punish you to that other dirty son of a bitch we don't like? What's his name? Yossarian, sir, Lieutenant Scheisskopf said. Yes, Yossarian. That's right. Yossarian. Yossarian? Is that his name? Yossarian? What the hell kind of a name is Yossarian? Lieutenant Scheisskopf had the facts at his finger tips. It's Yossarian's name, sir, he explained.
— Joseph Heller
I have faith in the United States and our ability to make good decisions based on the facts.
— Al Gore
The facts tell us that no religious Faith releases - or ever has released at any moment in History - a higher degree of warmth, a more intense dynamism of unification than the Christianity of our own day - and the more Catholic it is, the truer my words.
— Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
We are always coming up with the emphatic facts of history in our private experience and verifying them here. All history becomes subjective; in other words, there is properly no history; only biography.
— Ralph Waldo Emerson
The man of science dissects the statement, verifies the facts, and demonstrates connection even where he cannot its purpose.
— Margaret Fuller
The frontiers are not east or west, north or south, but wherever a man fronts a fact.
— Henry David Thoreau