Words matter. These are the best Human Needs Quotes from famous people such as Irving Langmuir, Naveen Jain, John Warnock, Bernie Sanders, Ron Dellums, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
History proves abundantly that pure science, undertaken without regard to applications to human needs, is usually ultimately of direct benefit to mankind.
I understand human needs. I grew up where far too many people lived day to day without elemental needs like food and shelter.
I have seen that technology has contributed to improved communication, that it’s contributed to better health care, that it’s contributed to better food supplies, that it has contributed to all the basic human needs.
Let us wage a moral and political war against war itself, so that we can cut military spending and use that money for human needs.
Basic human needs like food cannot be corporate questions.
We need a concept of development to meet human needs.
Apart from the scientific interest attached to my various journeyings, it has been made clear to me that human needs and aspirations differ little the world over and that no great difficulties arise in one race dealing with another when matters of scientific importance are involved.
With broadband access, we can revolutionize global access to education, health care, economic empowerment, and the delivery of critical human needs.
We already have – thanks to technology, development, skills, the efficiency of our work – enough resources to satisfy all human needs. But we don’t have enough resources, and we are unlikely ever to have, to satisfy human greed.
It is fortunate that molecular synthesis also serves the utilitarian function of producing quantities of rare or novel substances which satisfy human needs, especially with regard to health, and the scientific function of stimulating research and education throughout the whole discipline of chemistry.
The world is not flat, and PCs are not, in the hierarchy of human needs, in the first five rungs.
There are people out there who disagree with me politically, and understand the limits of that disagreement. It doesn’t mean we disagree as people on basic human needs.
The work of an advertising agency is warmly and immediately human. It deals with human needs, wants, dreams and hopes. Its ‘product’ cannot be turned out on an assembly line.
Classic economic theory, based as it is on an inadequate theory of human motivation, could be revolutionized by accepting the reality of higher human needs, including the impulse to self actualization and the love for the highest values.
An interface is humane if it is responsive to human needs and considerate of human frailties.
Friendships are among the most fundamental of human needs.
The priest is Christ’s slave, and Christ himself took the form of a slave and became obedient to death. So the priest in serving human needs lives a Godward life, possessed by God and witnessing that only when lives are utterly possessed by God do they find their true freedom.
Reducing a product’s definition to a list of features and functions ignores the real opportunity – orchestrating technological capability to serve human needs and goals.