Genetics is all about showcasing human beauty along with high-quality performance.
‐‐ Bela Karolyi
Genetics is crude, but neuroscience goes directly to work on the brain, and the mind follows.
‐‐ Leon Kass
Genetics play a huge part in who we are. But we also have free will.
‐‐ Aidan Quinn
Genghis Khan decreed religious tolerance for all of his conquered peoples. So I think he definitely would approve of our constitutional protections of freedom of religion. I think he would also approve of the way the U.S. has been able to attract talented people from all over the world.
‐‐ Amy Chua
Genghis Khan was a fascinating man and way ahead of his time.
‐‐ Ian Botham
Genius ain't anything more than elegant common sense.
‐‐ Josh Billings
Genius always finds itself a century too early.
‐‐ Ralph Waldo Emerson
Genius always gives its best at first; prudence, at last.
‐‐ Lucius Annaeus Seneca
Genius and virtue are to be more often found clothed in gray than in peacock bright.
‐‐ Van Wyck Brooks
Genius at first is little more than a great capacity for receiving discipline.
‐‐ George Eliot
Genius begins great works; labor alone finishes them.
‐‐ Joseph Joubert
Genius can probably run on ahead and seek out new ways. But the good artists who follow after genius - and I count myself among these - have to restore the lost connection once more.
‐‐ Kathe Kollwitz
Genius creates, and taste preserves. Taste is the good sense of genius; without taste, genius is only sublime folly.
‐‐ Alexander Pope
Genius does what it must, and talent does what it can.
‐‐ Edward G. Bulwer-Lytton
Genius goes around the world in its youth incessantly apologizing for having large feet. What wonder that later in life it should be inclined to raise those feet too swiftly to fools and bores.
‐‐ F. Scott Fitzgerald
Genius is a promontory jutting out into the infinite.
‐‐ Victor Hugo
Genius is a word too often tossed around in musical circles.
‐‐ Stanley Jordan
Genius is always accompanied by enthusiasm.
‐‐ Bryant H. McGill
Genius is always allowed some leeway, once the hammer has been pried from its hands and the blood has been cleaned up.
‐‐ Terry Pratchett
Genius is an African who dreams up snow.
‐‐ Vladimir Nabokov
Genius is an infinite capacity for taking pains.
‐‐ Thomas Carlyle
Genius is an overused word. The world has known only about a half dozen geniuses. I got only fairly near.
‐‐ Fritz Kreisler
Genius is another word for magic, and the whole point of magic is that it is inexplicable.
‐‐ Margot Fonteyn
Genius is childhood recalled at will.
‐‐ Charles Baudelaire
Genius is essentially creative; it bears the stamp of the individual who possesses it.
‐‐ Madame de Stael
Genius is eternal patience.
‐‐ Michelangelo
Genius is immediate, but talent takes time.
‐‐ Janet Flanner
Genius is independent of situation.
‐‐ Charles Churchill
Genius is initiative on fire.
‐‐ Holbrook Jackson
Genius is more often found in a cracked pot than in a whole one.
‐‐ E. B. White
Genius is never understood in its own time.
‐‐ Bill Watterson
Genius is not a possession of the limited few, but exists in some degree in everyone. Where there is natural growth, a full and free play of faculties, genius will manifest itself.
‐‐ Robert Henri
Genius is not perfected, it is deepened. It does not so much interpret the world as fertilize itself with it.
‐‐ Andre Malraux
Genius is nothing but continued attention.
‐‐ Claude Adrien Helvetius
Genius is nothing more than common faculties refined to a greater intensity. There are no astonishing ways of doing astonishing things. All astonishing things are done by ordinary materials.
‐‐ Benjamin Haydon
Genius is of no country.
‐‐ Charles Churchill
Genius is one of the many forms of insanity.
‐‐ Cesare Lombroso
Genius is one percent inspiration and ninety-nine percent perspiration.
‐‐ Thomas A. Edison
Genius is patience.
‐‐ Isaac Newton
Genius is present in every age, but the men carrying it within them remain benumbed unless extraordinary events occur to heat up and melt the mass so that it flows forth.
‐‐ Denis Diderot
Genius is rarely able to give any account of its own processes.
‐‐ George Henry Lewes
Genius is sorrow's child.
‐‐ John Adams
Genius is talent set on fire by courage.
‐‐ Henry Van Dyke
Genius is that in which the soul of a race bums at its brightest, revealing and preserving its vision; works of art are great and significant in proportion to the clarity and fulness with which they incarnate this vision.
‐‐ George Edward Woodberry
Genius is that which forces the inertia of humanity to learn.
‐‐ Henri Bergson
Genius is the ability to put into effect what is on your mind.
‐‐ F. Scott Fitzgerald
Genius is the ability to renew one's emotions in daily experience.
‐‐ Paul Cezanne
Genius is the capacity for productive reaction against one's training.
‐‐ Bernard Berenson
Genius is the recovery of childhood at will.
‐‐ Arthur Rimbaud
Genius is the talent for seeing things straight.
‐‐ Maude Adams