The human overpopulation issue is the topic I see as the most vital to solve if our children and grandchildren are to have a good quality of life.
I think that fiction is an excellent place for us to struggle with questions of good and evil, and humanity and inhumanity.
What sunshine is to flowers, smiles are to humanity. These are but trifles, to be sure; but scattered along life's pathway, the good they do is inconceivable.
When you begin to see the possibilities of music, you desire to do something good for people, to help humanity free itself from its hang-ups.
Language is one component of the human cognitive capacity which happens to be fairly amenable to enquiry. So we know a good deal about that.
There is one thing the photograph must contain, the humanity of the moment. This kind of photography is realism. But realism is not enough - there has to be vision, and the two together can make a good photograph.
The more intelligent the storytelling becomes and the deeper the character development, people will realize in film and television, like they do in real life, that human beings possess both good and bad.
The way I look at humanity, I don't think there's good guys or bad guys. We're all potentially bad and potentially good.
I'm interested in the human impact of the giant foot of misplaced government. After all, we encounter it every day.
What we now call 'finance' is, I hold, an intellectual perversion of what began as warm human love.
I think it's fascinating that there's a whole holiday dedicated to things that we fear and that's so interesting about the nature of humanity.
Faith is different from proof; the latter is human, the former is a Gift from God.
My faith in humanity leads me to believe that people are looking for something more elevating than the sordid details of the intimate aspects of one's personal life.
The sight of parents, children and grandparents all descending on a tented field to enjoy the pleasure of ideas and books renews my faith in humanity.
When you have put all your faith in man and continue to be disappointed, don't you hope there is something out of there that is not of human element?
I think there is a general unrest or curiosity about what a human future is going to be like, and whether the way we're living is even sustainable.
I think the American Dream should be about a greater progressive legislation that allows for what I call a necessary future world of cooperational humanism.
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.
The idea of future or past, either way, is a core part of entertainment. It's something we've always loved as humans. Its part of our psyche, I think.
We owe to the Middle Ages the two worst inventions of humanity - romantic love and gunpowder.
Being funny with a funny voice is more my comfort zone, a broader character that I try to humanize, a kind of silly or wacky persona that I try to fill in.