Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Arguements. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Arguements Quotes And Sayings by 98 Authors including Ida R. Yulia,Stefan Emunds,Jen Knox,Joseph Joubert,John Deacon for you to enjoy and share.
Which one is right? Which one is wrong? When you feel you could answer that type of questions, you trapped on your own perception.
-Back cover, Andante Part 1, English modified-
Arguing is a waste of time, because our attitudes need a quantum leap, not our knowledge. Arguing is a sport at best and a bad attitude at worst.
Inviting argument is easy. The goal is write something bold enough to invite contrary feedback and provoke real discussion.
We may convince others by our arguements, but we can only persuade them by their own
Arguments are healthy. They clear the air.
Well I won't argue about the matter. You always want to argue about things.
That is exactly what things were originally made for.
Contention is inseparable from creating knowledge. It is not contention we should try to avoid, but discourses that attempt to suppress contention.
I have resolved to demonstrate by a certain and undoubted course of argument, or to deduce from the very condition of human nature, not what is new and unheard of, but only such things as
agree best with practice.
Argue with anything else, but don't argue with your own nature.
We're not arguing. We're discussing." "You're a lawyer; you don't know the difference. I'm arguing.
You can't win an argument. You can't because if you lose it, you lose it; and if you win it, you lose it.
Rational argument can be defeated by refusing to argue rationally.
You ... you want me to argue with you? I thought you wanted me to understand you.
No point in arguing. But of course I argued.
The great charm in argument is really finding one's own opinions, not other people's.
I will listen to any argument put to me.
A problem that presents itself as a dilemma carries an unfortunate prescription: to argue instead of act.
When [a man] thinks that he is reasoning he is really disputing, just because he cannot define and divide, and so know that of which he is speaking; and he will pursue a merely verbal opposition in the spirit of contention and not of fair discussion.
It is impossible, or not easy, to alter by argument what has long been absorbed by habit
You can't rationally argue out
what wasn't rationally argued in.
The only truths worth arguing about are those truths that could prevent or lead to circumstances that may bite us in the rear sooner or later.
I'm a big believer in debate and difference of opinion.
What counts as rational argumentation is as historically determined and as context-dependent, as what counts as good French.
Reason argues the case, but fact may determine the judgment.
It's hard to argue with someone that won't argue with you.
History is above all else an argument. It is an argument between different historians; and, perhaps, an argument between the past and the present, an argument between what actually happened, and what is going to happen next. Arguments are important; they create the possibility of changing things.
Assertion is not argument; to contradict the statement of an opponent is not proof that you are correct.
The best way to win an argument is to begin by being right.
People argue themselves out of their pleasures
argument before he was
These arguments on each side (and many more might be produced) are so plausible, that I am apt to suspect, they may, the one as well as the other, be solid and satisfactory, and that reason and sentiment concur in almost all moral determinations and conclusions.
Debate, but do not argue.
Challenge, but do not force your opinions.
To win an argument, but lose a friendship, is a loss.
To lose an argument, but retain a friendship, is gain.
Do not dispute with anyone in any matter as far as possible. For in argumentation lies much harm and its evil is greater than its benefit.
I don't argue; I listen in silence with love. My silence answers better than my voice.
Most arguments are useless.
A knock-down argument; 'tis but a word and a blow.
Argument is to me the air I breathe. Given any proposition, I cannot help believing the other side and defending it.
Argument does not soften, but rather hardens, the obdurate heart.
What you owe your critics are your RESULTS not explanations not defence just RESULTS.Evidence terminates Arguments.
I am not arguing with you - I am telling you.
Arguments are extremely vulgar, for everyone in good society holds exactly the same opinion.
It doesn't do any good to argue. Be kind.
What's more, I believe in argument and I even love it. Argument is our most steadfast pathway toward truth, for it is the only proven arbalest against superstitious thinking, or lackadaisical axioms.
Two things, well considered, would prevent many quarrels: first, to have it well ascertained whether we are not disputing about terms, rather than things; and, secondly, to examine whether that on which we differ is worth contending about.
Though argument does not create conviction, the lack of it destroys belief.
You can argue with someone's opinion, but you can't argue with their story.
My life is my argument.
I love argument, I love debate. I don't expect anyone just to sit there and agree with me, that's not their job.
Quarrel with a friend - and you are both wrong.
There is always a multitude of reasons both in favor of doing a thing and against doing it. The art of debate lies in presenting them; the art of life lies in neglecting ninety-nine hundredths of them.
Arguments are never won by reason, but by men, who refuse to be reasonable
Everyone wants to argue. Everyone does. Everyone needs to.
The day-to-day making of policy is arguing all the time. You're trying to get the right approach and the right answer, and there are moments that aren't very pleasant. But in the end, you look at the overall product.
I'm having an argument with myself. And I'm losing. So not good.
For hundreds of pages the closely-reasoned arguments unroll, axioms and theorems interlock. And what remains with us in the end? A general sense that the world can be expressed in closely-reasoned arguments, in interlocking axioms and theorems.
When men exercise their reason coolly and freely, on a variety of distinct questions, they inevitably fall into different opinions, on some of them. When they are governed by a common passion, their opinions if they are so to be called, will be the same.
Argument does not teach children or the immature. Only time and experience does that.
No argument can persuade me to like oysters if I do not like them. In other words, the disturbing thing about matters of taste is that they are not communicable.
Arguing face to face can be a powerful thing, and done deftly and persistently, it can reinforce and build respect itself, even across major differences.
When our patterns are threatened by new facts, reason is seldom the victor: 'I know what I think, so don't go confusing me with new opinions.
Reason respects the differences, and imagination the similitudes of things.
When we wish to correct with advantage, and to show another that he errs, we must notice from what side he views the matter, for on that side it is usually true.
Discussion and argument are essential parts of science; the greatest talent is the ability to strip a theory until the simple basic idea emerges with clarity.
I tend not to argue about things that I don't believe in.
Profound insights arise only in debate, with a possibility of counterargument, only when there is a possibility of expressing not only correct ideas but also dubious ideas.
Analogy and probability are not bedrock; they are lifeboats in an ocean of doubt, and sometimes they founder. So rhetoric tends to the passionate:we argue, not with surety, but as the shipwrecked clinging to the only thing they have.
You can see it on the Internet: There's an argument going on continually about, 'What is folk music?' And I don't really want to get involved in that. It's an endless argument, a 'How many angels can dance on the head of a pin?' kind of argument.
I will not waste it arguing about the merits of this short story or that poem. Why would I, when all such opinions are subjective, and no final resolution can ever be reached?" Some
Ideas cannot be changed through argument. We are not seeking to discover new ideas but rather to create new attitudes in ourselves and others with regard to ideas.
People generally quarrel because they cannot argue.
Arguments are like eels: however logical, they may slip from the minds weak grasp unless fixed there by imagery and style.
First you win the argument, then you win the vote.
If we know only our own side of the argument, we hardly know even that; it becomes stale, soon learned only by rote, untested, a pallid and lifeless truth.
Good argument is intended to persuade another.
But the idea is to provoke and persuade, not to soothe. And the best way to make an argument is to make it, straightforwardly, honestly, passionately, without regard to whether people will like you afterward.
There are two modes of knowledge: through argument and through experience. Argument brings conclusions and compels us to concede them, but it does not cause certainty nor remove doubts that the mind may rest in truth, unless this is provided by experience.
I mean only that in our Times, 'tis not a rare Dispute," Maskelyne assures him. "Reason, or any Vocation to it,
the Pursuit of the Sciences,
these are the hope of the Young, the new Music their Families cannot follow, occasionally not even listen to.
I argue very well. Just ask any of my remaining friends.
I am not a person of opinions because I feel the counter arguments too strongly.
You don't want to argue with me because you don't know how to. None of you do, because you avoid people who think differently,
Bad quarrels come when two people are wrong. Worse quarrels come when two people are right.
The aim of argument, or of discussion, should not be victory, but progress (Joseph Joubert).
We get on now with a lighter step, and quicker: ridicule is found to be more convincing than argument, imaginary agonies touch more than true sorrows, and monthly novels convince, when learned quartos fail to do so.
Silence is argument carried out by other means.
One can never win an argument with ignorance.
In studying critical reasoning we are primarily interested in arguing for something rather than arguing with someone. The
What use are the best of arguments when they can be destroyed by force?
The written argument endures. The oral argument is fleeting.
Life is one long struggle between conclusions based on abstract ways of conceiving cases, and opposite conclusions prompted by our instinctive perception of them.
The practice of narrative and argument does not lead to invention, but it compels a certain coherence of thought.
History is furious debate informed by evidence and reason.
We must reinforce argument with results.
Argument is meant to reveal the truth, not to create it.
You never argued with my mother. You couldn't win.
Men argue. Nature acts.
Insight makes argument ridiculous.
Conviction, far from being based upon reason, is the enemy of reason; because rationality does not change, while convictions do, all the time.
Passionate expression and vehement assertion are no arguments, unless it be of the weakness of the cause that is defended by them, or of the man that defends it.
From the outset, however, this whole controversy has been plagued by tacit assumptions, very often of a philosophical rather than a physical character ...
I'd rather lose an argument than get into a long discussion in order to win it.