A Quote by William Blake

Hindsight is a wonderful thing but foresight is better, especially when it comes to saving life, or some pain! — © William Blake
Hindsight is a wonderful thing but foresight is better, especially when it comes to saving life, or some pain!
Reality looks much more obvious in hindsight than in foresight. People who experience hindsight bias misapply current hindsight to past foresight. They perceive events that occurred to have been more predictable before the fact than was actually the case.
Hindsight is good, foresight is better; but second sight is best of all.
The real trick in life is to turn hindsight into foresight that reveals insight.
It is easy to act as a Saturday morning quarterback and replay the game lost the night before. All of us seem to have better hindsight (the ability to see after the event what should have been done) than foresight
Hindsight is notably cleverer than foresight.
Hindsight. It's like foresight without a future.
Hindsight is a wonderful thing.
The inevitable effect of a biographer's hindsight is to belittle the subject's foresight.
Hindsight, usually looked down upon, is probably as valuable as foresight, since it does include a few facts.
Hindsight is a wonderful thing, but I was maybe too quick to leave Fulham.
Hindsight's a wonderful thing. If we all had it there would be no history to write about.
Oh! the wisdom, the foresight and the hindsight and the rightsight and the leftsight, the northsight and the southsight, and the eastsight and the westsight that appeared in that august assembly.
In life we all go through different situations that cause you to reflect. I had the opportunity to be married to a wonderful person. And for some reason two good people couldn't make a good thing work. But in life, the one thing that I love about being an artist is that you can sometimes use the pain that you go through to make beautiful things.
If I had better foresight, maybe I could have improved things a little bit. But frankly, if I had perfect foresight, I would never have taken this job in the first place.
And why do we worship hindsight (as in the news media's constant rehash of the day, the week, the year) and yet distrust foresight, which actually might make a difference in our lives?
In this article we begin to address the subject of vaccinosis, the general name for chronic dis-ease caused by vaccines. For some readers the very idea that vaccines are anything but wonderful and life-saving may come as a surprise, and it's not a very pleasant one. After all, the general population pictures vaccines as one of modern medicine's best and brightest moments, saving literally millions from the scourge of diseases like poliomyelitis and smallpox.
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