George Bernard Shaw
This quote is credited to George Bernard Shaw, an Irish playwright and critic. It suggests that progress and innovation often come from individuals who are willing to challenge the status quo and think outside the box. By being unreasonable and refusing to settle, these individuals push boundaries and drive change.
It is George Bernard Shaw. This info is right on Wikipedia. The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man. http://wiki.answers.com/quotes/George_Bernard_Shaw/, Man and Superman (1903) "Maxims for Revolutionists"Irish dramatist & socialist (1856 - 1950)
Because their priorities have shifted from the physical to the spiritual, true Christians are intolerant of sin and falsehood. This could be seen as being "unreasonable." Unfortunately, immature Christians can have trouble distinguishing between the sin and the sinner (or the adherent and the false doctrine), which makes them appear even more unreasonable. Ideally this should not be the case, but all Christians are a "work in progress" at various stages of development, and showing proper love for others is the culmination of the Christian "graces." (2 Peter 1:5-7)
The homophone of progress is "progrès", which means "progress" in French.
Yes, progress is still progress, even if it is slow. Any forward movement or improvement, no matter how gradual, is considered progress.
That is the correct spelling of "progress" (advancement).
The noun of "progress" is "taqaddom" (تقدم) The verb of "to progress" is "taqaddama" (تقدم)
The prefix for progress is "pro-."
Progress is a noun.
Progress is a noun and a verb, although they have different pronunciations. Noun: Your progress will not go unnoticed. Verb: Some diseases progress slowly.
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