Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Topics. 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 Topics Quotes And Sayings by 99 Authors including Henry Cloud,Sophia Bush,Northrop Frye,Gregory A. Smith,Eleanor Roosevelt for you to enjoy and share.
I fell in love with the topic of leadership. For three decades, that has been a major focus of my hands-on work: listening to and working with leaders, their teams and their organizations.
I'm looking for things that are really connected - education, both in the developing world and at home. The way that that affects communities and, in particular, women.
My subject is the educated imagination, and education is something that affects the whole person, not bits and pieces of him .
common issues across different disciplines;
Poor minds talk about people average minds talk about events great minds talk about ideas
Science/horror/Non-Fiction/Technology/Music/Games/Space... these are the subjects of future. The other again will develop but not with such speed like these here.
Humor, motivations, moral,gods,energy,secrecy
I'd like to think I'm going upriver in talking about world-view topics rather than particular political or controversial topics.
I would prefer to write about everything; what else is there? But one must be selective.
The best subjects are always people, who never fail to amaze me by their unpredictability.
Subject matter is sort of overemphasized in the way books get discussed, I think.
Probably every subject is interesting if an avenue into it can be found that has humanity and that an ordinary person can follow.
I will be asking my network to lead a discussion on the issues of class, race, energy, the environment, disaster planning, Iraq
all those things and more. This encompasses so many of the major issues of our time.
Themes around education and learning run through my work.
There's information about everything from poetry to
pills, from picture frames to pyramids, and from pudding to psychology
and that's just in the P aisle,
which we're walking down right now.
What are the politics of boredom?
It's not easy to find a topic. Talking of home is painful. Talking of the present unbearable.
Anything that you can do a tiny bit of research about, I'll turn it into an obsession.
Ideas are information taking shape.
marginalia we were discussing today,
I like to talk about lint and coasters, the expansion of the universe and maybe McDonald's. I'm completely turned off by the idea of politics.
Much of anything. But put a series together and patterns emerged. Some were obvious: haircuts, weight gained or lost, fashion trends. Others required
Things it is not polite to discuss at the dinner table: politics, religion, and the walking dead.
Seemingly unrelated [things] that are in fact really related, that's the stuff I like to talk about. Like dancing, language learning, swimming, three-pointers ...
The subject, however various and important, has already been so frequently, so ably, and so successfully discussed, that it is now grown familiar to the reader, and difficult to the writer.
Abstract academic discussions have a way of leaving their mark on entire civilizations, as the events of this century have proved all too well.
If you can't talk about, write about it!
I have a certain pool of subject matter that I like to write about, things that interest me: politics, religion, ecology, and relationships between men and women. And that's usually what I focus on.
Introduction Everybody
The multiplicity of ideas is what I'm interested in.
I'd like to see much more understanding of emotional issues around hurt, abandonment, disappointment, longing, failure and shame, where they stem from and how they drive people and policies brought into public discourse.
Favorite subject? I would have to say creative writing.
Information upon points of practical politics.
I do have some Catholic stuff that is done from the perspective of an ignorant Catholic. But other than that, topic-wise, there's nothing really filthy.
Some broad themes brought me where I am today. At a very young age, my hobby became thinking and finding connections.
I'm putting this topic right here. If you don't want to talk about it, that's fine. I'll simply take it away and talk about something else you may be more interested in.
Some topics seem to be nothing but philosophical circles designed to lure the unsuspecting ant to its death.
Discussion in class, which means letting twenty young blockheads and two cocky neurotics discuss something that neither their teacher nor they know.
Things that are interesting, people will pass around the Internet, around the world. And the blogosphere is only the tip of the iceberg.
You name it, I'm interested in a lot of things.
Well the themes for me were and remain sex and love and grief and death - the things that make us and undo us, create and destroy, how we breed and disappear and the emotional context that surrounds these events.
The necessity of knowing a little about a great many things is the most grievous burden of our day. It deprives us of leisure on the one hand, and of scholarship on the other.
If it's far away, it's news, but if it's close at home, it's sociology.
History! Read it and weep!
Everyone wants to talk about it, and right now music, flat-panel televisions, a whole host of new handheld devices are fun to talk about and very exciting to look at.
Be personal. Be relevant. Be specific.
The broader the topic, the easier it is, not only to fill a book, but to set the bar pretty high for really great stuff.
I'm doing stuff on Kaballah and Scientology and a little bit more racial stuff, for good measure.
Beauty, business, blogs, & bullshit...never a dull conversation with your friends you have tons in common with.
The only thing that interests me is history - reviewing the past and making something out of it.
If your audience is young, it'd be youth culture, if your audience is older, it'd be older people, if it were senior citizens, it'd be senior citizen issues. So you try and hit the target audience.
I've always been most interested in the politics of everyday life: your relation to whatever you're doing, or what your ambitions are, where you live, where you find yourself in the social hierarchy.
I got politics and economics moving and then others took over.
What people will do to get away from boredom!
How uninteresting interesting things can become.
Being a Southerner, I'm interested in sex, violence, religion and all the things that make life interesting.
I want to talk about the internet, the impact it is having on the innocence of our children, how online pornography is corroding childhood and how, in the darkest corners of the internet, there are things going on that are a direct danger to our children, and that must be stamped out.
I really like the topic about time is an Illusion and also this quote "#Time Physical things are merely the collapse of psychic things into physical reality." - it's powerful. As much you repeat it as much powerful it gets.
We have to talk about liberating minds as well as liberating society.
Whatever you come across- go beyond
Everyone to me has to pick a subject to talk about in music if you're going to be a writer.
Like immense time-binding discussions, genres allow ideas to be developed and traded, and for variations to be spun down through decades.
One emphasis of my research has been on the question of how people spend their time. Time is the ultimate finite resource, or course, so the question of how people spend it would seem to be important.
What have we fallen in love with that's not as effective as it used to be? What do we love doing that's not really working? What's off limits for discussion? Do we have any "old couches" that need to be thrown out?
Things you might want to talk about in such a group?
I'm interested in social commentary.
The best ideas start as conversations.
There is no topicmore soporific and generally boring than the topic of Ireland as Ireland, as a nation.
My abiding theme is separations.
Robots ... I think that is a hot topic.
The theme of luck comes up a lot. It's something I thought about before, why some people are lucky and some people aren't lucky. It seems like some people you meet can sort of cultivate luck, and I've always been fascinated by that.
Take any problem in life and it will fall under one of three categories ... money, health or relationships.
Since I'm not a journalist, I talk about issues that encourage an interchange of ideas through conversation while also being entertaining.
Politics ... is the hottest, most dangerous subject in the land. It's not only a conversation-wrecker, it's a friendship-wrecker, a family-wrecker, a job-wrecker, a future-wrecker.
The subject comes first, the medium second.
Specific, Measurable, Actionable, Relevant, and Timely
There are no "great" subjects for the creative writer; there are only the singular details of a single human life.
IDEAS ARE THE CURRENCY OF the twenty-first century. Some
The two best subjects for conversation are talking shop and making love.
The subject of the chapter is not what we might expect from the title.
Ideas! There is no occasion for them; all that class of ideas which can be available in such a case has a language of representative feelings.
As soon as you bring up money, I notice, conversation gets sociological, then political, then moral.
Last week I did a piece for Style on advice to Laura Bush about how to help her husband. This week it's religion. It just depends on what I find interesting at the moment.
I'd have to struggle to find a subject in which I can't get some kind of interested pulse started.
I want to explore different topics and present them in slightly different ways.
Books is our main type of content, but we include user-generated content and will include other verticals such as scientific papers, sheet music, and comic books.
I've always been interested with the idea of technology and the way technology affects our ability to communicate - our ability to have a rewarding experience with technology versus a kind of dehumanizing experience with technology.
Economic chasm between people is something that is of interest to me. And something that I used to write about even as a child. It's something I've revisited a few times in my writings.
I know lots of things you don't"
"Name five."
"The Grand Unification Theory, tax law, binary, the capital of Azerbailan, and how tractors work.
The most animated talks we have are about ... things
That which a team does not want to discuss, it most needs to discuss.
These 3 topics will always generate 100+ comments of irrational/ridiculous people: Taxes, tipping, and spending on weddings.
Ideally, I'd like every issue to include a diverse group of stories that meet the qualifications sketched above, but covering a wide range of specific matter and flavour.
But there was a constant willingness to take out a
topic, test it, shake it apart, mix up the pieces, and test them again.
some more general discussion about the
My favorite subject is history. It's interesting.
Music, the universal language of love and hope and loss and everything else.
By all means," said Richard. "Let's talk about something other than books. Something safer. Like politics or religion.
Whether to the average person, applying contemporary community standards, the dominant theme of the material taken as a whole appeals to prurient interest.
The subject of my work has a lot to do with general, artistic matters, questions like: What is creativity? Where do we come from? What are our motors? What is coincidence? What is logic?