Professions
Professions
See Also: DOCTORS, LAWYERS
- Archeologists and historians … they are like jewelers, examining every tiny aspect of each valuable thing, with exactness and care —Judith Martin
- Business is a vocation. Philosophy is, or should be, an avocation —Elbert Hubbard
- A financier is a pawnbroker with imagination —Arthur W. Pinero
- (I guess) getting into nunhood is about as hard as pro football —Michael Malone
- (In ordinary business, man can settle to routine. The journalist can’t.) He’s [the journalist] like a robin, looking in all directions at once —Frank Swinnerton
- He who philosophizes is like a mirror that reflects objects that it cannot see, like a cave that returns the echo of voices that it does not hear —Kahlil Gibran
- Journalism, like history, is certainy not an exact science —John Gunther
- The Notary Public, like the domestic dog, is found everywhere —John Cadman Roper
- The philosopher is like a mountaineer who has with difficulty climbed a mountain for the sake of the surprise, and arriving at the top finds only fog; whereupon he wanders down again —W. Somerset Maugham
- Philosophy is like the ocean: there are pearls in its depths, but many divers find nothing for all their exertion and perish in the attempt —Ha Yevani Zerahia
- Police business … it’s a good deal like politics. It asks for the highest type of men, and there’s nothing in it to attract the highest type of men —Raymond Chandler
- Professors are just like actors. Actors got press agents that write things about them and they get so they believe it —Anon
- Professors get to looking at their diplomas and get to believing what it says there —Will Rogers, radio broadcast, January 27, 1935
- Psychoanalysis, like imagination, cannot be learned by rote —Theodor Reik
- Psychology is like physics before Galileo’s time, not a single elementary law yet caught a glimpse of —William James, letter to James Sully, 1890
- Running a liberal paper is like feeding melted butter on the end of an awl to a wild cat —Oscar Ameringer, Progressive, January 17, 1942
See Also: ABSURDITY
- Working journalists regularly chase wild geese. Like firemen, they answer alarms, many of them false —Richard Rovere