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prejudice break one-thing
One thing about prejudices -- once you break one of them, you're screwed, because then they all have got to go. Cher
prejudice truth-is weak
Truth is too weak to combat prejudice. Charlotte Lennox
prejudice bundles made
I am, in plainer words, a bundle of prejudices - made up of likings and dislikings. Charles Lamb
prejudice injustice blinded
The glaring injustice is there for all who are not blinded by prejudice to see. Bram Fischer
prejudice
That's what friendship is, sharing the prejudice of experience. Charles Bukowski
prejudice violent
Prejudice is more violent the blinder it is ... Elizabeth Blackwell
prejudice belief judgment
Don't shut down the feedback loop with judgment, rigid beliefs, and prejudices. Deepak Chopra
prejudice kind welfare
Prejudices of any kind are the destroyers of human happiness & welfare. Abdu'l Baha
prejudice talked
Race prejudice can't be talked down, it must be lived down. Francis J. Grimke
statistics observation application
The bearings of this observation lays in the application of it. Charles Dickens
statistics probability
History cannot be reduced to a set of statistics and probabilities. Alan Greenspan
statistics firsts
Statistics is the first of the inexact sciences. Edmond de Goncourt
statistics ends scissors
The thing with high-tech is that you always end up using scissors. David Hockney
statistics computer program
In computers, every 'new explosion' was set off by a software product that allowed users to program differently. Alan Kay
statistics life-is uncertain
Human life is proverbially uncertain; few things are more certain than the solvency of a life-insurance company. Arthur Eddington
statistics theory results
It is also a good rule not to put overmuch confidence in the observational results that are put forward until they are confirmed by theory. Arthur Eddington
statistics eyeballs rely
When all else failed, you had to rely on eyeball intrumentation. Arthur C. Clarke
statistics possibility refutation
It was one thing to have guessed it, another to have had that guess confirmed beyond possibility of refutation. Arthur C. Clarke