Quote by Werner Herzog
Perhaps I seek certain utopian things, space for human honour and

Perhaps I seek certain utopian things, space for human honour and respect, landscapes not yet offended, planets that do not exist yet, dreamed landscapes. – Werner Herzog

Other quotes by Werner Herzog

Technology has a great advantage in that we are capable of creating dinosaurs and show them on the screen even though they are extinct 65 million years. All of a sudden, we have a fantastic tool that is as good as dreams are. – Werner Herzog

Category:
Dreams
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For such an advanced civilization as ours to be without images that are adequate to it is as serious a defect as being without memory. – Werner Herzog

Category:
Image
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Other Quotes from
respect
category

We have accepted the principle of democracy and we are committed to respect the popular verdict and the result of that national consultation. – Mahmoud Abbas

Category:
respect

Part of our essential humanity is paying respect to what God gave us and what will be here a long time after were gone. – William J. Clinton

Category:
respect

If we were all determined to play the first violin we should never have an ensemble. therefore, respect every musician in his proper place. – Robert Schumann

Category:
respect

In this respect I suppose Im the total opposite of Garry. With his very emotive body language at the board he shows and displays all his emotions. I dont. – Vladimir Kramnik

Category:
respect

Random Quotes

Sentimentality–thats what we call the sentiment we dont share. – Graham Greene

Category:
Emotions

I learned to impersonate the kind of person that talks about poetry. It comes from teaching, I think. – Robert Morgan

Category:
Poetry

We are no longer in a state of growth; we are in a state of excess. We are living in a society of excrescence. The boil is growing out of control, recklessly at cross purposes with itself, its impacts multiplying as the causes disintegrate. – Jean Baudrillard

Category:
Excess

Only the use of footnotes enables historians to make their texts not monologues but conversations, in which modern scholars, their predecessors, and their subjects all take part. – Anthony Grafton (b.1950), The Footnote: A Curious History, “Epilogue: Some Concl

Category:
Quotations