47 Metaphors for goals

The latter extends not only to the individual but to all things with which the individual is connected, to the species, nay, to all the rest of the world, and its final goal is eternal happiness: all natural capacities are directed toward the highest good or toward God.

THE GENTILE CARRIES OFF HIS SPOIL ILLUSTRATIONS Lifting off his broad-brimmed hat to her in a gracious sweep "Her goal is Zion, not Babylon, sirremember that!"

Another goal presented to individuals by the promoters and fashioners of civilization is individual perfection, physical, mental, emotional, moral.

As a matter of fact, the first goal of Alexander's conquest was the rich land of Egypt.

Our goal today was the Fazenda Boa Esperanza, twenty- four miles off.

The goal of history, again, is the establishment of the perfect form of the state.

Its general aim, as has been said, is "to show, alike from philosophy and history, as against the materialists of the time, that the proper goal of life was not mere existence, however long, or pleasure of any sort, but something nobly intellectual and moral, and that the pious Israelite was on the surest path to its attainment.

Old friends who would troop into my boyhood and trumpet, 'Bob, don't forget, when you're a man, that the goal is honour, and the code: Do unto your neighbour as you would have your neighbour do unto you.

Which goal was the old C Y ranch-house at Moccasin Spring on Soogan Creek, where lived the Dales and their daughter Molly.

The goal of human endeavor is peace of conscience, which is attained only through the determination to be virtuous, i.e., to live in harmony with self.

His goal was not the tossing bridle rein, but the stout strap which circled the head just above the bit, and his big right hand jarred home on this goal.

The goal of these policies was the gradual revolutionizing and final separation of the south-easterly districts from the Austro-Hungarian monarchy and their union with Servia.

Romantic love is celestial, for it is altruistic, yet it does not preach contempt of the body, and its goal is marriage, the chief pillar of civilization.

The end of the All is itself alone, is life, activity; the universal goal of particular beings, like that of the universe, is the conservation of being.

Romantic love is celestial, for it is altruistic, yet it does not preach contempt of the body, and its goal is marriage, the chief pillar of civilization.

Yet even for demons, the ultimate goal was the samerelease from living and blissful identification with the Supreme. Dharma alone, however, could not directly achieve this end.

The ideal of the church in China which he had set before him, the goal he desired to reach, was a native, self-governing, self-supporting, and self-propagating church.

But the goal you should set yourself, as you proceed from topic to topic, is the attainment of the power to be at your best in the first discussion.

The goal of civilization ... is human society so organized in all of its constituent groups that each shall yield the best possible service to each one and thereby to mankind as a whole, (producing) the perfect organization of humanity."

The goal of the world-development is deliverance from the misery of existence, the peace of non-existence, the return from the will and representation, become spatial and temporal, to the original, harmonious equilibrium of the two functions, which has been disturbed by the origin of the world or to the antemundane identity of the absolute.

The goal is a hole in the ground, in which the stakes, usually consisting of other shells of the same kind, are deposited.

That goal from the twenty-five-yard line was as pretty a performance as I've ever seen.

The growth of liberty has been the constant struggle of the poor against the privileged classes; and the goal of that struggle has ever been the equality of all men before the law.

German Kultur fixes an inflexible limit to the aspirations of women, while our goal is complete freedom for the mothers of men.

The goal of the journey, Cadbury Castle, is, according to strong local tradition, no less a spot than Camelot, the palace and castle of the king of romance and hero of the BritishArthur.

47 Metaphors for  goals