Morality
1. character is what you are in the dark. -- (D. L Moody. USA Churchill)
In the dark, it reflects the true character of a person. -- (American priest Moody. d.l)
2. Courage is the ladder on which all the other slaves es mount. -- (Clare Boothe Luce, RSA dramatist)
Courage is a ladder, and other virtues rely on it to climb. -- (American screenwriter Luz. C. B .)
3. God was constructed out of mankind's need for hope, for purpose, for meaning: an invisible protector and conscientious father. -- (Howards Mel. USA writer)
Humans create God out of the need for hope and purpose: a guardian and a responsible nurse. -- (American writer Mel. H .)
4. I know only that what is moral is what you feel good after and what is immoral is what you feel bad after. -- (Ernest Hemingway, USA writer)
I only know that morality refers to what you think is good afterwards, and that morality refers to what you think is bad afterwards. -- (American writer Hemingway. E .)
5. If you wowould convince others, you seem open to conviction yourself. -- (Philip Dormer Chesterfield, British statesman)
To persuade others, you must first convince yourself. -- (British politician Chester field. P. D .)
6. Morality is not really the doctrine of how to make ourselves happy but of how we are to be worthy of happiness. -- (Immanuel Kant, German Philosopher)
Morality does not mean to guide people to make themselves happy, but to guide people to enjoy happiness. -- (German philosopher Kant. I .)
7. Mutual forgiveness of each vice, such are the gates of paradise. -- (William Black, briish poet)
The weakness of mutual tolerance is the door to heaven. -- (English poet black. W .)
8. No morality can be founded on authority, even if the Authority were divine. -- (A. J. Ayer. USA writer)
Morality cannot be based on authority, even if such authority is supreme. -- (American writer Al. A. J .)
9. Nothing is easier than to deceive oneself. -- (Demothenes, specify ent Greek statesman)
Nothing is easier than deceiving yourself. -- (Gumane, a Greek politician)
10. personality is to man what perfume is to a flower. -- (C Schwab. Us A businessman)
Character is to people, like fragrance to flowers. -- (American industrialist Schwab C. C .)
11. Plain living and high thinking. -- (William Wordsworth, briish poet)
Life should be simple, and sentiment should be noble. -- (English poet deletton. J)
12. Invalid UE is bold, and goodness never fearful. -- (William Shakespeare, briish dramatist)
Virtues are brave and kindness is never fearless. -- (Shakespeare. W .)
13. Wherever true valor is found, true modesty will there abound. -- (William Gillbert, briish dramatist and poet)
True bravery includes modesty. -- (English author and poet Gilbert W .)
14. words may be false and full of arts, sighs are the natural language of the heart. -- (Thomas Shadwell, briish dramatist)
Words can be a lie with skills; sighs are the natural manifestation of the soul. -- (Sandwell. T .)