Sunday, December 22, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Hyman G. Rickover

« All quotes from this author
 

I believe it is the duty of each of us to act as if the fate of the world depended on him. Admittedly, one man by himself cannot do the job. However, one man can make a difference... We must live for the future of the human race, and not for our own comfort or success.

 
Hyman G. Rickover

» Hyman G. Rickover - all quotes »



Tags: Hyman G. Rickover Quotes, Authors starting by R


Similar quotes

 

There are indications because of new inventions, that 10, 15, or 20 nations will have a nuclear capacity, including Red China, by the end of the Presidential office in 1964. This is extremely serious. . . I think the fate not only of our own civilization, but I think the fate of world and the future of the human race, is involved in preventing a nuclear war.

 
John F. Kennedy
 

To a future world,— inhabited, no doubt, by a less acute and understanding race of men,— all this may seem a trifle strange. If so, that will be because the world of the future will have forgotten what it was like to live in 1929.

 
Thomas Wolfe
 

I think the ultimate sense of security will be when we come to recognize that we are all part of one human race. Our primary allegiance is to the human race and not to one particular color or border. I think the sooner we renounce the sanctity of these many identities and try to identify ourselves with the human race the sooner we will get a better world and a safer world.

 
Mohamed ElBaradei
 

In this city 300 languages are spoken and the people that speak them live side by side in harmony.
This city typifies what I believe is the future of the human race and a future where we grow together and we share and we learn from each other.

 
Ken Livingstone
 

There are two futures, the future of desire and the future of fate, and man's reason has never learnt to separate them. Desire, the strongest thing in the world, is itself all future, and it is not for nothing that in all the religions the motive is always forwards to an endless futurity of bliss or annihilation. Now that religion gives place to science the paradiscial future of the soul fades before the Utopian future of the species, and still the future rules. But always there is, on the other side, destiny, that which inevitably will happen, a future here concerned not as the other was with man and his desires, but blindly and inexorably with the whole universe of space and time. The Buddhist seeks to escape from the Wheel of Life and Death, the Christian passes through them in the faith of another world to come, the modern reformer, as unrealistic but less imaginative, demands his chosen future in this world of men.

 
John Desmond Bernal
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact