« All Action Quotes · Maxwell Maltz's Page
Action Quotes by Maxwell Maltz
- Study the situation thoroughly, go over in your imagination the various courses of action possible to you and the consequences which can and may follow…
- Often the difference between a successful person and a failure is not one's better abilities or ideas, to take a calculated risk - and to…
- Your automatic guidance system cannot guide you when you're standing still.
- Realizing that our actions, feelings and behaviour are the result of our own images and beliefs gives us the level that psychology has always needed…
- Skill in any performance whether it be in sports in playing the piano in conversation or in selling merchandise consists not in painfully and consciously…
More Action Quotes
- Forgiveness is the key to action and freedom. — Hannah Arendt
- Revolutionaries do not make revolutions. The revolutionaries are those who know when power is lying in the street and then they can… — Hannah Arendt
- Under conditions of tyranny it is far easier to act than to think. — Hannah Arendt
- Action without a name, a who attached to it, is meaningless. — Hannah Arendt
- All human actions have one or more of these seven causes: chance, nature, compulsions, habit, reason, passion, desire. — Aristotle
- Moral excellence comes about as a result of habit. We become just by doing just acts, temperate by doing temperate acts, brave… — Aristotle
- Well begun is half done. — Aristotle
- A tragedy is a representation of an action that is whole and complete and of a certain magnitude. A whole is what… — Aristotle
- Thou wilt find rest from vain fancies if thou doest every act in life as though it were thy last. — Aristotle
- We become just by performing just action, temperate by performing temperate actions, brave by performing brave action. — Aristotle
- Every art and every inquiry, and similarly every action and choice, is thought to aim at some good; and for this reason… — Aristotle
- What the statesman is most anxious to produce is a certain moral character in his fellow citizens, namely a disposition to virtue… — Aristotle