Rarely do we see immediate use of innovative technologies. I believe that the future is built by small pieces that add up.
You can absolutely be what you can't see! That's what innovators and disruptors do.
Everybody has a world, and that world is completely hidden until we begin to inquire. As soon as we do, that entire world opens to us and yields itself. And you see how full and complex it is.
I'm very inquisitive, and I always have questions and need to touch things to see how it works or why it works.
Nature has planted in our minds an insatiable longing to see the truth.
People seldom see the halting and painful steps by which the most insignificant success is achieved.
The mania started with insomnia and not eating and being driven, driven to find an apartment, driven to see everybody, driven to do New York, driven to never shut up.
See, unlike most hackers, I get little joy out of figuring out how to install the latest toy.
Sports and entertainment are the only places where inner-city kids see themselves being able to succeed. Their intellectual development is something they don't relate to.
The obsession required to see a feature through from concept to release is not a rational thing to do with your brief time on this planet. Nor is it something to which an intelligent person should aspire.
I'm the guy pushing a trillion-dollar infrastructure plan. With negative interest rates throughout the world, it's the greatest opportunity to rebuild everything. Shipyards, ironworks, get them all jacked up. We're just going to throw it up against the wall and see if it sticks.
Anyway, there is a lot of really interesting work going on in the neuroscience and psychology of consciousness, and I would love to see philosophers become more closely involved with this.
We must examine then the concerns of the Government of Japan about the language of the treaty itself - of SOFA - and of the interim and further arrangements that have been made since 1995, and see whether or not we need to make any changes. Those are decisions I cannot make.
In the US, most progressives start to see the differences between internationalism and economic globalization.
I am longing to see Libya rejoin the world as the internationalist Mediterranean country that it was.
When I see something unjust, I have to intervene - it's hard for me to watch the underdog suffer.
It's been a great privilege to see how interwoven nations are and how incredibly complex these relationships are. It's so elaborate.
It angers me to see armed defenders at the bottom of Lost Cause statues, adding a renewed threat of violence to icons that are themselves part of an ideology of violence and intimidation.
I am a professor of astronomy and physics at Yale University, where I teach an introductory class in cosmology. I see the deficiencies that first-year students show up with.
I believe there's too little patience and context to many of the investigations I read or see on television.