 |
…awareness requires recognizing that we’re ultimately interdependent. Together we can enrich and renew the world we share rather than hasten its demise.
|
273 |
 |
[Leaders] see the world globally, and they know it is no longer possible to hide.
|
197 |
 |
So let’s admit it: in a nation, in a world, as complex and fluid as ours, we cannot function without leaders.
|
004 |
 |
Good leaders engage the world. Bad leaders entrap it, or try.
|
038 |
 |
Know thyself, then, means separating who you are and who you want to be from what the world thinks you are and wants you to do.
|
050 |
 |
The more we know about ourselves and our world, the freer we are to achieve everything we are capable of achieving.
|
065 |
 |
Clearly, to become a true leader, one must know the world as well as one knows one’s self.
|
068 |
 |
We need to wander through all the woods at our disposal, and out of all that to begin to understand ourselves and the world.
|
075 |
 |
In a perfect world, everyone would be encouraged to express, but not required to prove him- or herself. But neither the world nor we are perfect.
|
123 |
 |
Leaders differ from others in their constant appetite for knowledge and experience, and as their worlds widen and become more complex, so too do their means of understanding.
|
131 |