Absolute trust Quotes

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There has to be absolute trust between the tiger and its master, but its master must be the master - there must be no mistake about that.

Ridley Scott
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The natural order of life is not the thinking and imagination, but living in the moment, with absolute trust.

Roshan Sharma
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When life's adversities overwhelm you, look beyond your circumstances with an absolute trust that God is in control.

Mamur Mustapha
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All a child's life depends on the ideal it has of its parents. Destroy that and everything goes - morals, behavior, everything. Absolute trust in someone else is the essence of education.

E.M. Forster, Where Angels Fear to Tread
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Comrade Kim Jong Il, by continuing the march of Songun without interruption and with absolute trust in our service personnel and other people who were faithful to the Party's cause, led the socialist cause of Juche along the road of victory.

Kim Jong-un
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Did she know, could she know what it meant to him when she turned to him, when she opened herself to him like this? In absolute trust. Her strength, her valor remained a constant wonder to him, as did her unrelenting determination to defend those who could no longer defend themselves. These moments, when she allowed her vulnerabilities, her doubts, her fears to tremble to the surface compelled him to take care. In these moments he could show her it wasn’t just the warrior he loved, he treasured, but the woman, the whole of her. The dark and the light.

J.D. Robb, Fantasy in Death
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Absolute trust in the reality of things begins to be shaken as the problem of truth enters upon the scene. The moment man ceases merely to live in and with reality and demands a knowledge of this reality, he moves into a new and fundamentally different relation to it. At first, to be sure, the question of truth seems to apply only to particular parts and not to the whole of reality. Within this whole different strata of validity begin to be marked off, reality seems to separate sharply from appearance. But it lies in the very nature of the problem of truth that once it arises it never comes to rest. The concept of truth conceals an immanent dialectic that drives it inexorably forward, forever extending its limits.

Ernst Cassirer, The Philosophy of Symbolic Forms 3: The Phenomenology of Knowledge
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