« All Whole Universe Quotes · Stephen Hawking's Page
Whole Universe Quotes by Stephen Hawking
- If the total energy of the universe must always remain zero, and it costs energy to create a body, how can a whole universe be…
- The human race is just a chemical scum on a moderate-sized planet, orbiting around a very average star in the outer suburb of one among…
- We each exist for but a short time, and in that time explore but a small part of the whole universe
More Whole Universe Quotes
- So many things happen for every event, and if you try to manipulate it, it means you are struggling against the whole… — Deepak Chopra
- We must conceive of this whole universe as one commonwealth of which both gods and men are members. — Marcus Tullius Cicero
- Let everything in creation draw you to God. Refresh your mind with some innocent recreation and needful rest, if it were only… — Paul of the Cross
- No man can possibly know what life means, what the world means, until he has a child and loves it. And then… — Lafcadio Hearn
- Failure or success seems to have been allotted to men by their stars. But they retain the power of wriggling, of fighting… — E. M. Forster
- Gradually, at various points in our childhoods, we discover different forms of conviction. There's the rock-hard certainty of personal experience ("I put… — Philip Pullman
- The overwhelming astonishment, the queerest structure we know about so far in the whole universe, the greatest of all cosmological scientific puzzles,… — Lewis Thomas
- There ought not to be anything in the whole universe that man can't poke his nose into-that's the way we're built and… — Robert A. Heinlein
- What wonderful majesty! What stupendous condescension! O sublime humility! That the Lord of the whole universe, God and the Son of God,… — Francis of Assisi
- So many religions are there because so many people are unhappy. A happy person needs no religion; a happy person needs no… — Rajneesh
- The field of experience is the whole universe in all directions. Theory remains shut up within the limits of human faculties. — Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
- Life cannot have had a random beginning. ... The trouble is that there are about two thousand enzymes, and the chance of… — Fred Hoyle