I speak very highly of Jim Thome. Not only is he a great player, but he’s a great individual. – Harmon Killebrew
Wash four distinct and separate times, using lots of lather each time from individual bars of soap. – Howard Hughes
The range of choice open to the individual is not the decisive factor in determining the degree of human freedom, but what can be chosen and what is chosen by the individual. – Herbert Marcuse
But it is well to remember that we are dealing with nations every one of which has a direct individual interest to serve, and there is grave danger in an unshared idealism. – Henry Cabot Lodge
Individual consciences are fine but individual consciences have to be made manifest. – Hillary Clinton
It was Nietzsche who first made us conscious of the significance of the individual as a term in the evolutionary process-in that part of the evolutionary process which has still to take place. – Herbert Read
You don’t have to be in the brightest, shiniest state of being an individual to feel like you’re exceptional. – Jenny Slate
Although individual temperaments vary, boys are designed to be more assertive, audacious, and excitable than girls are. – James Dobson
The liberty of the individual must be thus far limited; he must not make himself a nuisance to other people. – John Stuart Mill
Mass media provides the essential link between the individual and the demands of the technological society. – Jacques Ellul
Each individual fact, taken by itself, can indeed arouse our curiosity or our astonishment, or be useful to us in its practical applications. – Hermann von Helmholtz
If the individual is a unit in a corporate mass, his life is not merely brutish and short, but dull and mechanical. – Herbert Read
When it comes to individual bloggers, they have many choices now that include blogging for a network or going solo. – Jason Calacanis
We fought no better, perhaps, than they. We exhibited, perhaps, no higher individual qualities. – Joshua Chamberlain
On the one hand, there are individual actions such as throwing, pushing, touching, rubbing. It is these individual actions that give rise most of the time to abstraction from objects. – Jean Piaget
In Degas’s compositions with several dancers, their steps, postures and gestures often resemble the almost geometric, formal letters of an alphabet, whereas their bodies and heads are recalcitrant, sinuous and individual. – John Berger
Reflective abstraction, however, is based not on individual actions but on coordinated actions. – Jean Piaget