I'm often reassured in a bizarre - perhaps perverse - way when I find in the archive stuff that contradicts what my assumptions have been. That's interesting and exciting.
People just assume, over the years, that soccer players are not too intelligent. As with most assumptions, they're wrong.
A number of people have read 'Two-Way Split' and made certain assumptions about what the author's like, and I'm highly disappointing to them. I don't drink, I don't eat meat; that's very disappointing for a hard-boiled writer.
Begin challenging your assumptions. Your assumptions are the windows on the world. Scrub them off every once in awhile or the light won't come in.
I want to be part of Major League Baseball's Hall of Fame, but I don't want to be part of the kind of Hall of Fame that's based on voters' beliefs and assumptions.
Assumptions are the termites of relationships.
Most of our assumptions have outlived their uselessness.
Move beyond the old assumptions, practices, and language that can be barriers to equal access.
I learned during my term and in the presidency that we should not discuss about assumptions or insinuations. If one day I have to do something against the U.S., the first one to get to know what I was going to do would be the president of the U.S.
What a man believes may be ascertained, not from his creed, but from the assumptions on which he habitually acts.
Differences challenge assumptions.
Ask questions; don't make assumptions.
Some people, they make these assumptions before they even listen to the music.
While analogies are useful, however, they can also be misleading. They smuggle in assumptions that can be wrong.
Making assumptions taught me a lot as a producer, because it's something I never do now.
In a start-up company, you basically throw out all assumptions every three weeks.
Sometimes I make certain assumptions but find they're not immediately obvious to my players.
You can't ever make assumptions about a family tree.
Untested assumptions and lazy habits of thought can be shown up, once put in a spotlight of a different hue.
Society cannot continue to disable themselves through their need to categorize people or make assumptions as to another individual's abilities.