The most satisfactory definition of man from the scientific point of view is probably Man the Tool-maker.
We all live with blinders on. They come with having a personal vantage point.
The starting point of sanctification is the filthiness, corruption, or stain of sin.
If you're not really having fun then there's no point of really trying.
From an artist's point of view, I always want to work with the writers I admire.
That was the tricky part. You poured inordinate amounts of time and attention and affection into your kids, but the result was indirect. You didn't point out a cat to your one-year-old and then watch him, minutes later, say 'Cat.' Instead, you pointe...
This singularity of meaning--I was my face, I was ugliness--though sometimes unbearable, also offered a possible point of escape. It became the launching pad from which to lift off, the one immediately recognizable place to point to when asked what w...
when somebody plays music, you listen. you just follow those sounds, and eventually you understand the music. the point can't be explained in words because music is not words, but after listening for a while, you understand the point of it, and that ...
Whoever crossed the river at the fordable point, knows how deep the river is.
A house full of people is a house full of different points of view.
Because of my age and because there's more work on the small screen. What it's missing in quality it makes up for in quantity. From an actor's selfish point of view.
It gets too easy to write from the point of view of a male character of my age, with the same cultural frame of reference.
At the turning point of our emotions, there lay a magic milestone of hope, before us.
A man is master of himself to a certain point, but not beyond it. -William Crimsworth
The point isn't to win the game. The point is to play a beautiful game. (paraphrased)
The point of view is the biggest problem with games, because what we play must be clearly presented in the best way for me to have an immersive game experience.
I figure there's no point in stressing about what's out of my control, and all I can do is make the best of what I've got.
I think Shakespeare really got it. He was the first one to introduce psychology to villains and give them a real point of view.
There is no absolute point of view from which real and ideal can be finally separated and labelled.
The LAW points you to self-efforts. GRACE points you to the finished work of Jesus Christ.
When I was 13, I asked for a guitar. And that's how I really started explaining my point of view.