Words matter. These are the best Human Values Quotes from famous people such as Dalai Lama, Edinson Cavani, Paul Berg, Deeyah Khan, Shari Arison, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
In most cases, my visits to the West are for promotion of human values and religious harmony.
Wherever I go meeting the public… spreading a message of human values, spreading a message of harmony, is the most important thing.
There’s a lot of politics in football, and sometimes the real values of the sport, those human values, get lost.
Novel technologies and ideas that impinge on human biology and their perceived impact on human values have renewed strains in the relationship between science and society.
Rather than shutting down free speech, we need to broaden it, to make it possible for young people to say even the things we dislike so we can talk them down. And we need politicians to articulate a picture of the future that includes all of us. Not British values but shared human values.
Putting forward your positive energy connects you back to basic human values which we all share. Good Deeds Day shows that no matter the size of the gesture, a smile that brightens someone else’s day or volunteering in your community, we can all take active part in making a difference.
So many people for so many years have promoted technology as the answer to everything. The economy wasn’t growing: technology. Poor people: technology. Illness: technology. As if, somehow, technology in and of itself would be a solution. Yet machine values are not always human values.
If only we could accept that there is no difference between us where human values are concerned. Whatever sex.
Our message to leaders from every continent was simple: California has succeeded on climate and clean energy because we’ve emphasized local, human values and built a coalition that includes community and environmental leaders, working families, and communities of color – as well as unions and progressive business.
A technical solution may be defined as one that requires a change only in the techniques of the natural sciences, demanding little or nothing in the way of change in human values or ideas of morality.
Could that have been what happened to the human race – a willing perversity that set at naught all human values which had been so hardly won and structured in the light of reason for a span of more than a million years?
All fine architectural values are human values, else not valuable.
Social media is reducing social barriers. It connects people on the strength of human values, not identities.
Not enough countries, not enough armies, not enough armed groups are abiding by the fundamental human values enshrined in the Geneva Conventions.
Technology and industry have distanced people from nature and magic and human values.