A Quote by Robert Genn

People suspend judgment in the presence of mystery. — © Robert Genn
People suspend judgment in the presence of mystery.
Most people suspend their judgment till somebody else has expressed his own and then they repeat it.
Real dialogue is where two or more people become willing to suspend their certainty in each other's presence.
The ultimate cynicism is to suspend judgment so that you are not judged.
Suspend judgment until you see the end of the situation.
I determine nothing; I do not comprehend things; I suspend judgment; I examine.
It's my job to motivate the audience to believe. I have to get them to suspend their judgment in favor of involvement.
If we suspend judgment and look to how we can make conscious choices to uplift the situation, we can be sure that we are doing all we can to attract a happier and more harmonious outcome.
Our duty is to believe that for which we have sufficient evidence, and to suspend our judgment when we have not.
When you force a man to act against his own choice and judgment, it's his thinking that you want him to suspend.
Flags are bits of colored cloth that governments use first to shrink-wrap people’s brains and then as ceremonial shrouds to bury the dead. When independent-thinking people (and here I do not include the corporate media) begin to rally under flags, when writers, painters, musicians, film makers suspend their judgment and blindly yoke their art to the service of the “Nation,” it’s time for all of us to sit up and worry.
Their [the Skeptics'] way of speaking is: "I settle nothing. . . . I do not understand it. . . . Nothing seems true that may not seem false." Their sacramental word is . . . , which is to say, I suspend my judgment.
The inner self of every human waits patiently until we are ready to discover it; then it extends an invitation to enter the luminous mystery of existence in which all things are created, nurtured, and renewed. In the presence of this mystery, we not only heal ourselves, we heal the world.
In listening to stories we tend to suspend disbelief in order to be entertained, whereas in evaluating statistics we generally have an opposite inclination to suspend belief in order not to be beguiled.
The search for God's presence was much of a mystery as God himself, and what was God if not a mystery?
In presence, there is no right or wrong, because there is no duality. There is no judgment.
If what the philosophers say be true, that all men's actions proceed from one source; that as they assent from a persuasion that a thing is so, and dissent from a persuasion that it is not, and suspend their judgment from a persuasion that it is uncertain, so likewise they seek a thing from a persuasion that it is for their advantage.
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