Then you'd have found me pinned beneath a large metal pipe.
‐‐ Vic Morrow
Then you figure out that if you don't throw it as hard as you can, you can put it where you want. It's more important where you put it.
‐‐ Dennis Eckersley
Then you get into it, especially if you start talking about football, fighting and Muhammad Ali. Then the ladies get very bored and start delivering ultimatums.
‐‐ Oliver Reed
Then you get to be involved with all the people, meet all the beautiful girls, get all the good food, get ready and locked in before all the crowds hit.
‐‐ Paul Kantner
Then you get to the last half of the 20th century, Americans are getting very skeptical about their leaders and their institutions, and another place that is affected is parties and conventions.
‐‐ Michael Beschloss
Then you have to be with somebody who understands your job. Understands there are gonna be dollybirds going, 'Hi I'm Candy,' and be prepared to ignore that. And also be prepared to be there when you get home. That's a difficult job.
‐‐ Jay Kay
Then you must look for a new body. That's what we call reincarnation.
‐‐ Alex Chiu
Then you start another book and suddenly the galley proofs of the last one come in and you have to wrench your attention away from what you're writing and try to remember what you were thinking when you wrote the previous one.
‐‐ Bernard Cornwell
Then you've got Georgetown, and I really just like everything about them. When I went down there with my mom, it really opened my eyes to what they were all about. I have to factor in what a school like that can do for me, even away from being a basketball player.
‐‐ Nerlens Noel
Then, you were supposed to discover the city, where they were. But because somebody like skeletons. And that they discovered that they were at a cheap price, we used too many skeletons all over the place, and the public got the wrong message.
‐‐ John Hench
Thence, I suppose, my natural disposition to make fresh acquaintances, and to break with them so readily, although always for a good reason, and never through mere fickleness.
‐‐ Giacomo Casanova
Thence results, for science as well as for industry, the necessity of the division and association of labor. I receive and I give - such is human life. Each directs and is directed in his turn.
‐‐ Mikhail Bakunin
Thenewno2 is sort of my little prototype band, really.
‐‐ Dhani Harrison
Theo does comedy now, and he's traveling around the country doing comedy, and I actually just saw him, he's from Louisiana, and I just saw him when I went home to visit my family in Louisiana. I saw his comedy show and he was brilliant.
‐‐ Trishelle Cannatella
Theocratic and military authorities share one thing: they have no sense of humour.
‐‐ Bassem Youssef
Theodore Roethke was a poet I was raised with so he has a lot of sentimental value for me.
‐‐ Krist Novoselic
Theodore Roosevelt had been enthralled with the idea of Texas since 1883, when he arrived in the Dakota Territory to ranch cattle.
‐‐ Douglas Brinkley
Theodore Roosevelt had drawn public attention to his attractive family in order to create a bond with ordinary Americans. Eleanor Roosevelt had successfully broached the idea that a First Lady could be nearly as much a public figure as her husband.
‐‐ Robert Dallek
'Theogony' should be read before the great Homeric epics because it gives an account of the cosmology that is taken for granted by Homer. It does for paganism what the Old Testament attempted to do for monotheism.
‐‐ Tariq Ali
Theologians have a great problem because they're seeking to speak about God. Since God is the ground of everything that is, there's a sense in which every human inquiry is grist to the theological mill. Obviously, no theologian can know everything.
‐‐ John Polkinghorne
Theological reflection takes place within history, but the history within which it takes place is an ongoing, open-ended process.
‐‐ David Novak
Theological writing is usually done in essays or books, but I hope to show that if we concentrate on sentences, we may well learn something we might otherwise miss.
‐‐ Stanley Hauerwas
Theologically, the creation of chocolate demonstrates both the unity and the diversity of humanity. Wherever you taste it, in every country of the world, it is immediately recognizable. Other things, in every cuisine, are just food, but chocolate is chocolate.
‐‐ David Augsburger
Theology always has moral implications, and morality is always undergirded by theology.
‐‐ David Novak
Theology in general seems to me a substitution of human ingenuity for divine wisdom.
‐‐ Julia Ward Howe
Theology is a science of mind applied to God.
‐‐ Henry Ward Beecher
Theology is anthropology.
‐‐ Anselm Feuerbach
Theology is endlessly interesting in that you can study it without believing in anything. I do believe, but you don't have to. I got very caught up in the 11th-century monasticism and the Cistercians. My dissertation was about Aelred of Rievaulx and one of his books.
‐‐ Susan Hill
Theology is in disrepute among most Western intellectuals. The word is taken to mean a passe form of religious thinking that embraces irrationality and dogmatism. So too, Scholasticism.
‐‐ Rodney Stark
Theology is never any help; it is searching in a dark cellar at midnight for a black cat that isn't there. Theologians can persuade themselves of anything.
‐‐ Robert A. Heinlein
Theology is not only about understanding the world; it is about mending the world.
‐‐ Miroslav Volf
Theology is the effort to explain the unknowable in terms of the not worth knowing.
‐‐ H. L. Mencken
Theology is the logic of the Devil.
‐‐ Jose Bergamin
Theology is unnecessary.
‐‐ Stephen Hawking
Theology necessitates an image of God as a conscious, rational, supernatural being of unlimited power and scope who cares about humans and imposes moral codes and responsibilities upon them, thereby generating serious intellectual questions such as: 'Why does God allow us to sin?' 'Does the Sixth Commandment prohibit war?'
‐‐ Rodney Stark
Theoretical physics is one of the few fields in which being disabled is no handicap - it is all in the mind.
‐‐ Stephen Hawking
Theories are always very thin and insubstantial, experience only is tangible.
‐‐ Hosea Ballou
Theories are patterns without value. What counts is action.
‐‐ Constantin Brancusi
Theories cannot claim to be indestructible. They are only the plough which the ploughman uses to draw his furrow and which he has every right to discard for another one, of improved design, after the harvest.
‐‐ Paul Sabatier
Theories come and go, but fundamental data always remain the same.
‐‐ Mary Leakey
Theories, for me, are just about freeing your mind. It doesn't mean the theory is going to work like a scientific theory works. It's about freeing your mind and making you think a different way.
‐‐ Steve Martin
Theories of evolution must provide for the creative acts which brought such theories into existence.
‐‐ Michael Polanyi
Theories of history used to be supernatural: the divine ruled time; the hand of God, a special providence, lay behind the fall of each sparrow. If the present differed from the past, it was usually worse: supernatural theories of history tend to involve decline, a fall from grace, the loss of God's favor, corruption.
‐‐ Jill Lepore
Theories of love are found in the works of scientists, philosophers, and theologians.
‐‐ Mortimer Adler
Theories pass. The frog remains.
‐‐ Jean Rostand
Theories that go counter to the facts of human nature are foredoomed.
‐‐ Edith Hamilton
Theorists can be wrong; only nature is always right.
‐‐ David Gross
Theorists can create all sorts of theories which go beyond the Standard Model. But there's not one bit of experimental evidence to point out which way you should go.
‐‐ Burton Richter
Theorists have wonderful ideas which take years and years to be verified.
‐‐ David Gross