Quotes about Individual
...the right of the individual to elect freely the manner of his care in illness must be preserved.
— Dwight D. Eisenhower
One must begin in one's own life the private solutions that can only in turn become public solutions.
— Wendell Berry
No one is without Christianity, if we agree on what we mean by that word. It is every individual's individual code of behavior by means of which he makes himself a better human being than his nature wants to be, if he followed his nature only. Whatever its symbol - cross or crescent or whatever - that symbol is man's reminder of his duty inside the human race.
— William Faulkner
We will establish a new land where man can assume that every individual man—not the mass of men but individual men—has inalienable right to individual dignity and freedom within a fabric of individual courage and honorable work and mutual responsibility.
— William Faulkner
Religion, therefore, as I now ask you arbitrarily to take it, shall mean for us the feelings, acts, and experiences of individual men in their solitude, so far as they apprehend themselves to stand in relation to whatever they may consider the divine.
— William James
Every advance begins in a small way and with the individual.
— Henry Ford
The humblest individual exerts some influence, either for good or evil, upon others.
— Henry Ward Beecher
All that is valuable in human society depends upon the opportunity for development accorded the individual.
— Albert Einstein
When there throbs in the heart of an individual Latter-day Saint a great and vital testimony of the truth of this work, he will be found doing is duty in the Church.
— Gordon Hinckley
Common is not the same as universal.
— Mortimer Adler
The Creator never singles out an individual for an important service to mankind without first testing him, through struggle, in proportion to the nature of the service he is to render.
— Napoleon Hill
Perceiving the order of nature to be that individual happiness shall be inseparable from the practice of virtue, I am willing to hope it may have ordained that the fall of the wicked shall be the rise of the good. To J. Correa de Serra, Monticello, Apr. 19, 1814
— Thomas Jefferson