Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Eventuated. 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 Eventuated Quotes And Sayings by 97 Authors including Glen Duncan,William Golding,Susan Sontag,Charlotte Bronte,Bruno Schulz for you to enjoy and share.
Then what happened next happened.
A star appeared ... and was momentarily eclipsed by some movement.
The "happening" operates by creating an asymmetrical network of surprises, without climax or consummation, this is the alogism of dreams rather than the logic of most art.
Till now I had only heard, seen, moved - followed up and down where I was led or dragged - watched event rushed on event, disclosure open beyond disclosure - but now, I thought.
Yet what is to be done with events that have no place of their own in time; events that have occurred too late, after the whole of time has been distributed, divided, and allotted; events that have been left in the cold, unregistered, hanging in the air, homeless, and errant?
I know from my studies and from my life is that there is no such thing as a true event. We know dates and times and locations and participants but accounts of what happened depend upon the perspective from which the event is viewed. Take
Coincidence may be described as the chance encounter of two unrelated causal chains which
Events are called inevitable only after they have occurred.
One event is an anomaly, two is a coincidence, and three a pattern.
Fate is unpenetrated causes.
i was a prisoner of events
Events tend to recur in cycles.
This field of activity generated a vast literature of carefully assembled one-line omens on this pattern: If A happened, B will happen. Here the sought-for outcome B, known as the apodosis, is deemed to be the consequence of an observed phenomenon, the protasis A. One
But the ignition did, in fact, occur. And it changed everything.
an event of such prodigious proportions and importance that it infused her with a new will to live and materialized a dream that brightened her days and soothed her lonely nights.
Something was about to happen.
It is a precisely datable historical event having the full weight that real historical happenings have; like them, too, it happens once only; it is contemporary with all times, but not in the way that a timeless myth would be.
The mind is the cutting edge of the evolving event system.
You get a show where people are jumping up and dancing, but it's not a critical event in the sense of profound catharsis. Essentially it's celebratory.
Coming to Christ is not an event. It is a process where we keep trying and trying and never give up.
Events do not really have beginnings or ends. Behind every event is the previous one, causing, or helping to cause, what follows.
And what I know from my studies and from my life is that there is no such thing as a true event. We know dates and times and locations and participants but accounts of what happened depend upon the perspective from which the event is viewed.
World events do not occur by accident. They are made to happen, whether it is to do with national issues or commerce; and most of them are staged and managed by those who hold the purse strings.
Events," I say to the Captain, "events control our lives, although we have no understanding of them nor do they have any motivation. Everything is blind chance, happenstance, occurrence; in an infinite universe anything can happen. After the fact we find reasons.
Of observable and verifiable events in the past is a product of the modern
Whatever is rejected from the self, appears in the world as an event.
Certain actions take place outside the normal course of things so unexpectedly that they seem to paralyse ordinary capacity for feeling surprise;
ABRUPT, adj. Sudden, without ceremony, like the arrival of a cannon- shot and the departure of the soldier whose interests are most affected by it. Dr. Samuel Johnson beautifully said of another author's ideas that they were concatenated without abruption.
Revolution is not an event! It's a process
All of the very important events in my life happen by chance.
( ... ) an instance when Fate had conspired with Nature to give them a sign that theirs was no ordinary journey.
Fatherlessness didn't strike me as being an event. It was a state of life.
Coincidence is a factor in life not always sufficiently considered; and the events I have related can be explained in a perfectly natural manner, if one be inclined to do so.
All this happened, more or less.
It was the unexpected that happened, always.
Babies were born, old people died, stocks were traded, and someone faked an orgasm. All in those five seconds.
Compromising with events time moves along.
A non-event ... is better to write about than an event, because with a non-event you can make up the meaning yourself, it means whatever you say it means.
And every one of these events is connected. But not by luck: it's pure cause and effect.
Sometimes a spontaneous action can have all kinds of unforeseen consequences.
The idea of a 'happening' is that there is little distance between the viewer and it, whatever 'it' is. It's an experience that's on-going and evolving.
An event of colossal and overwhelming significance may happen all at once, but the words which describe it have to come one by one in a long chain.
When actions are followed by events that are not causally related to the prior acts, people often erroneously perceive contingencies that do not, in fact, exist
EFFECT, n. The second of two phenomena which always occur together in the same order. The first, called a Cause, is said to generate the other-which is no more sensible than it would be for one who has never seen a dog except in pursuit of a rabbit to declare the rabbit the cause of the dog.
The greatest events occur without intention playing any part in them; chance makes good mistakes and undoes the most carefully planned undertaking. The world's greatest events are not produced, they happen.
Events don't happen because I write a speech. I am allowed to write a speech because events are going to happen.
What most likely caused the second event was the rupture of a main steam line, carrying steam under extreme pressure. This was Turner's theory from the beginning.
An event has happened, upon which it is difficult to speak, and impossible to be silent.
Action is a unifier.
Was there a turn, a change in the atmosphere? To single out a particular moment is to distort the record, for it suggests a clear history of cause and effect that can only betray our sense of what really happened.
Events are only the shells of ideas; and often it is the fluent thought of ages that is crystallized in a moment by the stroke of a pen or the point of a bayonet.
Find a gap between a trigger event and our usual conditioned response to it and by using that pause to collect ourselves and shift our response
The Anticipation is annihilated by the act
Consider a world in which cause and effect are erratic. Sometimes the first precedes the second, and sometimes the second the first. Or perhaps cause lies forever in the past effect in the future, but future and past are intertwined.
To thoughtful natures, events are like depth charges: the surface is calm, but the shock spreads further.
In my life's chain of events nothing was accidental. Everything happened according to an inner need.
great events have incalculable results.
Events that are predestined require but little management. They manage themselves. They slip into place while we sleep, and suddenly we are aware that the thing we fear to attempt, is already accomplished.
There is no such thing as accident; it is fate misnamed.
There are certain events which to each man's life are as comets to the earth, seemingly strange and erratic portents; distinct from the ordinary lights which guide our course and mark our seasons, yet true to their own laws, potent in their own influences.
Synchronistic events constitute moments in which a 'cosmic' or 'greater' meaning becomes gradually conscious in an individual; generally it is a shaking experience.
You are not an observer, you are a participant.
According to the Law of Cause and Effect, every effect must have a cause. In other words, everything that happens has a catalyst; everything that came into being has something that caused it. Things don't just happen by themselves.
Nothing has happened until it happens
The inciting incident is how you get (characters) to do something. It's the doorway through which they can't return, you know. The story takes care of the rest.
If the proper preparations have been made and the necessary precautions taken, any staged event is guaranteed success
Ethelred The Unready
I'm interested in the way major events don't necessarily announce themselves as major events. They're often little things - the drip, drip of life that changes people or affects people.
Like physical events with their causal and teleological interpretations, every linguistic event had two possible interpretations: as a transmission of information and as the realization of a plan.
A single event can shape our lives or change the course of history.
When he pressed his lips to hers, she was not surprised. It happened the way the sun rose, the way a flower blossomed, the way fain fell from the sky, the way the dead stopped breathing. Naturally. Inevitably.
The action is in the interaction.
Now it all seems so simple. Events intersect free of any logic of sequence; they cover space and time in an even, translucent layer. Memory re-creates them from the back, from the front, or sideways, but to them it makes no difference.
Death is what makes life an event.
Things happen to people by accident.
Every phenomenon manifests itself of its own accord. This manifestation is always distinct from form, and is the essence of the immediate, the trace of the immediate.
Life happened. In all its banality, brutality, cruelty, unfairness. But also in its beauty, pleasures and delights. Life happened.
Each time it happens we're tempted to infer the direct intervention of a Maker.
Individual events. Events beyond law. Events so numerous and so uncoordinated that, flaunting their freedom from formula, they yet fabricate firm form.
Open the history of the past at whatsoever page you will and there you shall find coincidence at work bringing about events that the merest chance might have averted. Indeed, coincidence may be defined as the tool used by Fate to shape the destinies of men and nations.
Synchronicity: A meaningful coincidence of two or more events where something other than the probability of chance is involved.
They stood by the open window of their hotel room with the rain sweeping into their faces. A bolt of lightning lit up the Grand Canal. Struck it out of the darkness in a searing eloquent flash. The expectation was that the night to come would be no less bracing, no less eloquent.
Accidents did not just happen. From time to time they were carefully plotted, calculated, and arranged to one's advantage-all, of course, under the cloak of happenstance.
A timeline is a linear representation of cause and effect, changing one event alters all that follow.
Cause and effect is as absolute and undeviating in the hidden realm of thought as in the world of visible and
material things. Mind is the master weaver, both of the inner garment of character and the outer garment of
circumstance.
There were moments in which a person reached a crossroads, when something happened, out of the blue, to change the course of life's events.
Every action triggers a reaction.
Any event, once it has occurred, can be made to appear inevitable by a competent historian.
Cause and effect is the basis of my education, leading me to an essence far more profound than any rule of societal conditioning.
Always you find that the more decisive event wins so my father's sort of annual decisiveness which came upon him on the Day of Atonement every year, he suddenly remembered that he was Jewish.
I've never really done anything to create what has happened. It creates itself. I'm here because it happened. But I didn't do anything to make it happen apart from saying 'Yes'
with this. It was all just a coincidence. She had
tell us the events that took place in
The hero sees that the event is ancillary: it must follow him.
Nothing in this world happens by chance
Once an event has taken place, since you cannot alter the past, all that is left to you is your response.
Most events recorded in history are more remarkable than important, like eclipses of the sun and moon, by which all are attracted,but whose effects no one takes the trouble to calculate.
Things don't just happen, people make them happen
Happenstance intersecting with received wisdom produces something entirely new and significant
Nothing in this universe occurs by accident.
Some events take a lifetime to reveal their damage and influence.