On the Net, the bell curve reclaims its tails. The uncommon is as accessible as the common. The very fragmentation of the Internet allows us to find ourselves in other people - and to know that we are not alone.
Human science fragments everything in order to understand it, kills everything in order to examine it.
You are what resides before, beyond and between what you think so do not be consumed by thought. It is only a fragment of your magic.
I think it's a reflection of the music business in general, which to me seems very fragmented.
The law of humanity ought to be composed of the past, the present, and the future, that we bear within us; whoever possesses but one of these terms, has but a fragment of the law of the moral world.
Break a vase, and the love that reassembles the fragments is stronger than that love which took its symmetry for granted when it was whole.
Thinking fragments reality - it cuts it up into conceptual bits and pieces.
I was writing notes, but not composing poems. The Hunter began to develop out of this fragmented process.
I'd love to have the time to learn to sing opera properly rather than bellowing half-formed fragments of melody in exuberant moments.
Libraries keep the records on behalf of all humanity. the unique and the absurd, the wise and the fragments of stupidity.
Film is fragmented and gets into lots of other people's hands. There are a lot of pleasures that theatre gives me. You get to perform uninterrupted.
Of this our true individual life, our present life is a glimpse, a fragment, a hint, and in its best moments a visible beginning.
I've always been fascinated by the operation of memory - the way in which it is not linear but fragmented, and its ambivalence.
I believe that Canadians have the common sense to see that a better future cannot be built on fragmentation.
As specialists of apparent life, stars serve as superficial objects that people can identify with in order to compensate for the fragmented productive specialisations that they actually live.
With the fragmentation of television audiences and the advent of cable and on-demand services, the prestige of being an anchor is not what it was in the days of Walter Cronkite.
Most of my videos consist of fragments, one or two minutes long. They are haikus or sketches. I have thousands.
I guess I'm just hopelessly fascinated by the realities that you can assemble out of connected fragments.
If the security forces continue to be dominated as they are now by political groups or sects, then the people won't trust in them - and the result will be civil war or fragmentation of the country.
All that you may achieve or discover you will regard as a fragment of a larger pattern of the truth which from the separate approaches every true scholar is striving to descry.
Divorced from the cosmos, from nature, from society and from each other, we have become fractured and fragmented.