For, to be a stranger is naturally a very positive relation; it is a specific form of interaction.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Our very lives depend on the ethics of strangers, and most of us are always strangers to other people.
For this reason, strangers are not really conceived as individuals, but as strangers of a particular type: the element of distance is no less general in regard to them than the element of nearness.
Admiration and familiarity are strangers.
Translating any insights I have for strangers' lives into positive action in my own has proved a challenge. While I've learned a lot about what everyone else is thinking, I fail miserably to use such knowledge in my private relationships.
Sometimes you have to get to know someone really well to realize you're really strangers.
Fiction and essays can create empathy for the theoretical stranger.
It's a wild thing, that people have the ability to help each other by just relating to one another.
The moment one accosts a stranger or is accosted by him is above all in this life the moment of drama... Whoever we meet watches us intently at the quick, strange moment of meeting, to see whether we are disposed to be friendly.
No one is ever really a stranger. We cling to the belief that we share nothing with certain people. It's rubbish. We have almost everything in common with everyone.
Everybody is just a stranger, but that's the danger in going my own way.