A Quote by N. Scott Momaday

The landscape of the American West has to be seen to believed and has to be believed to be seen. — © N. Scott Momaday
The landscape of the American West has to be seen to believed and has to be believed to be seen.
It's a landscape that has to be seen to be believed. And, as I say on occasion, it may have to be believed in order to be seen.
It's definitely a difficult thing to capture and I mean, I've seen a ton of movies where I've believed the couple and I've seen a ton of movies where I have not believed them at all. Unfortunately, as an audience member, you check out if you don't believe them.
Justice must not only be seen to be done but has to be seen to be believed.
At college I'd seen my dead frog's limbs twitch under some applied stimulus or other - seen, but hadn't believed. Didn't dream of thinking beyond or around what I saw.
The thing that should most concern us is a shift in American foreign policy. We have had a bipartisan belief in American foreign policy based on the post-World War II institutions that believed in democratic global world, which Russia and the Soviet Union was often seen as hostile to. And most Republicans and Democrats have always basically believed in this world order. Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin and maybe Marine Le Pen do not agree with this basic structure of the world.
I once believed in Jenner; I once believed in Pasteur. I believed in vaccination. I believed in vivisection. But I changed my views as the result of hard thinking.
I have to be seen to be believed.
I wouldn't have seen it if I hadn't believed it.
If I hadn't believed it, then I wouldn't have seen it
A thing may be too sad to be believed or too wicked to be believed or too good to be believed; but it cannot be too absurd to be believed in this planet of frogs and elephants, of crocodiles and cuttle-fish.
Some things have to be believed to be seen.
That's what I'll be. A silhouette, rarely seen, and yet believed in.
An algorithm must be seen to be believed.
The thing that you have to understand about those of us in the Black Muslim movement was that all of us believed 100 percent in the divinity of Elijah Muhammad. We believed in him. We actually believed that God, in Detroit by the way, that God had taught him and all of that. I always believed that he believed in himself. And I was shocked when I found out that he himself didn't believe it.
My mother told me if I work hard and I really believed in American principles and I believed in God, anything is possible. That's why I'm not anxious to give away American values and principles for the sake of political correctness.
Some things just have to be believed to be seen.
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