Danh ngôn của Thomas J. Watson

Follow the path of the unsafe, independent thinker. Expose your ideas to the danger of controversy. Speak your mind and fear less the label of 'crackpot' than the stigma of conformity.
Follow the path of the unsafe, independent thinker. Expose your ideas to the danger of controversy. Speak your mind and fear less the label of 'crackpot' than the stigma of conformity.
Đi theo con đường của người suy nghĩ độc lập, không an toàn. Hãy phơi bày ý tưởng của bạn trước nguy cơ gây tranh cãi. Hãy nói lên suy nghĩ của mình và bớt sợ bị gắn mác 'kẻ lập dị' hơn là sự kỳ thị về sự tuân thủ.
Tác giả: Thomas J. Watson | Chuyên mục: Independence | Sứ mệnh: [7]
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Các câu danh ngôn khác của cùng tác giả: Thomas J. Watson
- Nothing so conclusively proves a man's ability to lead others as what he does from day to day to lead himself.
- If you aren't playing well, the game isn't as much fun. When that happens I tell myself just to go out and play as I did when I was a kid.
- All the problems of the world could be settled easily if men were only willing to think. The trouble is that men very often resort to all sorts of devices in order not to think, because thinking is such hard work.
- Whenever an individual or a business decides that success has been attained, progress stops.
- Every time we've moved ahead in IBM, it was because someone was willing to take a chance, put his head on the block, and try something new.
Các câu danh ngôn khác của cùng chuyên mục: Independence
- I'm one of seven kids, and I love being around a bunch of siblings because I think it teaches you independence, and it teaches you how to grow up quickly and also just be a good friend and be a good sister.
- Independence day is an interesting time to reflect on our strange fealty to institutions that the British left us, including those that were explicitly set up to be used against us.
- I pledged to put country before party and assert my independence when it reflects my principles or the needs of Central Virginia, and I have done that.
- Our Declaration of Independence was held sacred by all and thought to include all; but now, to aid in making the bondage of the Negro universal and eternal, it is assailed, sneered at, construed, hawked at, and torn, till, if its framers could rise from their graves, they could not at all recognize it.
- I should like to know if, taking this old Declaration of Independence, which declares that all men are equal upon principle, you begin making exceptions to it, where will you stop? If one man says it does not mean a Negro, why not another say it does not mean some other man?