(* recent or highlighted)
The wise discovered in their hearts
The bond of Being to Non-being.
Whence is this creation?
Is it founded or not?
The presiding Deity in the skies knows it,
Or perhaps He does not.
- Nasadiya Hymn Rigveda
The Portal of God is nonexistence. All things sprang from
nonexistence. Existence could not make existence existence. It must
have proceeded from nonexistence, and nonexistence and nothing are
one. Herein is the abiding place of the sage. - Chuang Tzu
A slave is he who cannot speak his thought. -
Euripides
The form of government, when it has been prudently established,
produces citizens distinguished for bravery, justice, and every other
good quality; whereas, on the other hand, bad institutions render men
cowardly, rapacious, and slaves of every foul desire. -
Dionysius of Halicarnassus
For love of money is the disease which renders us most pitiful
and grovelling, and love of pleasure is that which renders us most
despicable. - Longinus
When Anacharsis heard what Solon was doing, he laughed at the
folly of thinking that he could restrain the unjust proceedings and
avarice of his citizens by written laws, which, he said, resembled in
every way spiders' webs, and would, like them, catch and hold only
the poor and weak, while the rich and powerful would easily break
through them. - Plutarch
Nor ought we ever to allow any growing power to acquire such a
degree of strength as to be able to tear from us, without resistance,
our natural, undisputed rights. - Polybius
No man can be brave who thinks pain the greatest evil; nor
temperate, who considers pleasure the highest good. -
Cicero
No barriers, no masses of matter, however enormous, can
withstand the powers of the mind; the remotest corners yield to them;
all things succumb, the very heaven itself is laid open. -
Manilius
* I am disgusted with
power. - Messala Corvinus
As far as the stars are from the earth, and as different as
fire is from water, so much do self-interest and integrity
differ. - Lucan
To wish for death is a cowards part. - Ovid
How utter, utter is the dearth of men who venture down into
their own breasts, and how universally they stare at the wallet on
the back of the man before them. - Virgil
But life is a warfare. - Seneca
We become wiser by adversity, prosperity destroys the idea of
what is right. - Seneca
To be able to endure odium, is the first art to be learned by
those who aspire to power. - Seneca
In the struggle between those seeking power there is no middle
course. - Tacitus
When the state is most corrupt, the laws are most
numerous. - Tacitus
The wicked find it easier to coalesce for seditious purposes
than for concord in peace. - Tacitus
To rob, to ravage, and to murder, in their imposing language,
are the arts of civil policy. When they have made the world a
solitude, they call it peace. - Tacitus
A small state increases by concord; the greatest falls
gradually to ruin by dissension. - Sallust
* Envy, like flames, soars
upwards. - Livy
For there are three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the
Word, and the Holy Ghost: and these three are one. And there
are three that bear witness in earth, the Spirit, and the water, and
the blood: and these three agree in one. - I John
5:7-8
The torrents of Belial burst into Hell itself and roar with
eruptions of mud. The earth groans in anguish for the havoc in the
universe. The deeps howl. The living scream, go mad, and perish. God
thunders his raucous voice of power. His holy residence echoes the
truth of his glory. The armies of Heaven utter their voice and the
world's foundations quake and melt. The war initiated by the soldiers
of Heaven scourges the cosmos. It sweeps on until its incomparable
extermination, wholly determined, is complete. - Psalm 8 of the
Thanksgiving Psalms (Dead Sea Scrolls)
* The Father, Who is
Justice, is not without the Son or the Holy Spirit; and the Holy
Spirit, Who kindles the heart of the faithful, is not without the
Father and the Son; and the Son, Who is the plenitude of fruition, is
not without the Father or the Holy Spirit; they are inseparable in
Divine Majesty. - Hildegard of Bingen
We move through the world in a narrow groove, preoccupied with
the petty things we see and hear, brooding over our prejudices,
passing by the joys of life without even knowing that we have missed
anything. Never for a moment do we taste the heady wine of
freedom. - Yang Chu
* Our treasures trifles
seem, and all our life is dreaming, and the dreams themselves are
dreams. - Pedro Calderon
In this immeasurable and absolute elevation of soul, forgetting
all created things and liberated from them, thou shalt rise above
thyself and beyond all creation to find thyself within the shaft of
light that flashes out from the divine, mysterious darkness. -
St. Bonaventure
When everyone is moving towards depravity, no one seems to be
moving, but if someone stops he shows up the others who are rushing
on, by acting as a fixed point. - Blaise Pascal
The art of subversion, of revolution, is to dislodge
established customs by probing down to their origins in order to show
how they lack authority and justice. - Blaise Pascal
It is an appalling thing to feel all one possesses drain
away. - Blaise Pascal
Few men speak humbly of humility, chastely of chastity,
skeptically of skepticism. - Blaise Pascal
Either there are no corporeal substances, and bodies are merely
phenomena which are true or consistent with each other, such as a
rainbow or a perfectly coherent dream, or there is in all corporeal
substances something analogous to the soul... - Gotfried
Wilhelm Leibniz
There is a world of created beings - living things, animals,
entelechies, and souls - in the least part of matter.... Thus there
is nothing waste, nothing sterile, nothing dead in the universe; no
chaos, no confusions, save in appearance. - Gotfried Wilhelm
Leibniz
[Political] Science carries inseparably with it the
study of piety, and that he who is not pious cannot be truly
wise. - Giambattista Vico
Governments must conform to the nature of the men
governed. - Giambattista Vico
* So the principles of such
public law are to be found in the principles sacred history,
which according to human belief is the most ancient of all those that
have come down to us, including the fabulous history of the Greeks,
and here they are in harmony with Platos doctrine, which
supports the idea of providence; and they defend themselves against
the doctrine of fate of the Stoics, and the doctrine of chance of the
Epicureans; and they provide sanction against Hobbes, Spinoza, Bayle
and finally Locke, all of whom, with their similar doctrines, oppose
Catholic civil principles, and, so far as it is in them to do so,
show themselves capable of destroying the whole of human
society. - Giambattista Vico
It is not the young people that degenerate; they are not
spoiled till those of maturer age are already sunk into
corruption. - Baron de Montesquieu
Another bad effect of commerce is that the minds of men are
contracted, and tendered incapable of elevation. Education is
despised, or at least neglected, and heroic spirit is almost utterly
extinguished. - Adam Smith
Whilst men are linked together, they easily and speedily
communicate the alarm of any evil design. They are enabled to fathom
it with common counsel, and to oppose it with united strength.
Whereas, when they lie dispersed, without concert, order, or
discipline, communication is uncertain, counsel difficult, and
resistance impractible. Where men are not acquainted with each
others principles, nor experienced in business; no personal
confidence, no friendship, no common interest, subsisting among them;
it is evidently impossible that they can act a public part with
uniformity, perseverance, or efficacy. In a connection, the most
inconsiderable man, by adding to the weight of the whole, has his
value, and his use; out of it, the greatest talents are wholly
unserviceable to the public. No man, who is not inflamed by vainglory
into enthusiasm, can flatter himself that his single, unsupported,
desultory, unsystematic endeavors, are of power to defeat the subtle
designs and united cabals of ambitious citizens. When bad men
combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one, an
unpitied sacrifice in a contemptible struggle. - Edmund
Burke
Government is not reason; it is not eloquence; it is force! It
is a dangerous servant and a terrible master. - George
Washington
The strongest reason for the people to retain the right to keep
and bear arms is, as a last resort, to protect themselves against
tyranny in government. - Thomas Jefferson
A bad cause will ever be supported by bad means and bad
men. - Thomas Paine
The origin of society, then, is to be sought, not in any
natural right which one man has to exercise authority over another,
but in the united consent of those who associate. - Brutus
(Antifederalist No. 84)
Which is the best government? That which teaches us to
govern ourselves. - Johann von Goethe
A man who cannot command himself will always be a slave.
- Johann von Goethe
When once I, [Care], have taken possession of a man,
the whole world is of no avail to him: down on him comes perpetual
darkness, the sun never rises and never sets; his outward senses are
unimpaired, but night has nested in his soul, and though he may be
surrounded by treasures he can make none of them his own. His
happiness and unhappiness hang on whims, he starves amid abundance,
he procrastinates pleasure and procrastinates toil; he looks to
nothing but the future, and thus he can never have done with
anything. Shall he come or shall he go? He has lost the power to
decide; in the middle of an open road he gropes with hesitant
half-steps. He wanders ever deeper into the maze, sees all things
more and more distortedly, is a burden to himself and to others; he
chokes as he draws breath, and though not choked to death he is
lifeless; though not despairing, he does not accept. This helpless
rolling to and fro, the painful letting-go, the irksome must-do-so,
this state that now frees and now smothers, this half-sleep, this
unrefreshing repose, all this rivets him fast to where he is, and
makes him ready for hell. - Johann von Goethe
The ends crown our works, but Thou crown'st our ends. -
John Donne
* [Her eyes] let
out more light, then they tooke in. - John Donne
When a Base Man means to be your Enemy he always begins with
being your Friend. - William Blake
Remember, democracy never lasts long. It soon wastes, exhausts,
and murders itself. There never was a democracy yet that did not
commit suicide. - John Quincy Adams
Skepticism is slow suicide. - Ralph Waldo Emerson
Life is a pure flame, and we live by an invisible sun within
us. - Thomas Browne
Would you know what money is? Go borrow some. - George
Herbert
Life is a mission. Every other definition of life is false, and
leads all who accept it astray. Religion, science, philosophy, though
still at variance upon many points, all agree in this, that every
existence is an aim. - Giuseppe Mazzini
* In a divine commonwealth
holiness must have the principal honor and encouragement, and a great
difference be made between the precious and the vile. - Richard
Baxter
* A tyrant, says Plato,
must dispatch all virtuous persons, or he ceases to be safe; so that
he is brought to that unhappy necessity, either to live among base
and wicked persons, or not to live at all. - Edward Sexby
* We cannot distinguish
truth from falsehood, right from wrong, or know what obedience we owe
to the magistrate, or what we may justly expect from him, unless we
know what he is, why he is, and by whom he is made to be what he
is.... I cannot know how to obey unless I know in what, and to whom;
nor in what unless I know what ought to be commanded; nor what ought
to be commanded unless I understand the original right of the
commander, which is the great arcanum. - Algernon Sidney
Too low they build who build beneath the stars. - Edward
Young
[L]et us carry Skepticism ever so far, let us
doubt, if we can, of every thing about us; we cannot doubt of what
passes within ourselves. Our Passions and Affections are known
to us. They are certain, whatever the Objects may be,
on which they are employd. - Earl of Shaftesbury
They must upward still and onward, who would keep abreast of
truth. Though the cause of evil prosper, yet the truth alone is
strong; though her portion be the scaffold, and upon the throne be
wrong; yet that scaffold sways the future, and behind the dim
unknown, standeth God within the shadow, keeping watch above His
own. - James Russell Lowell
When you establish that the sovereignty of the people is
unlimited, you create and leave to chance in human society a degree
of power too large for itself and which is an evil no matter into
which hands it is placed.... [I]t is the degree of force and
not the depositaries of this force which must be charged. It is the
weapon and not the arm you must deal with severely. There are maces
too heavy for the hands of man. - Benjamin Constant
In the principle of equality I very clearly discern two
tendencies; one leading the mind of every man to untried thoughts,
the other prohibiting him from thinking at all. - Alexis de
Tocqueville
* All those who seek to
destroy the liberties of a democratic nation ought to know that war
is the surest and the shortest means to accomplish it. - Alexis
de Tocqueville
The Constitution is a compact to which the States were parties
in their sovereign capacity: now, whenever a compact is entered into
by parties which acknowledge no common arbiter to decide in the last
resort, each of them has a right to judge for itself in relation to
the nature, extent, and obligations of the instrument. - John
Calhoun
Life is real! Life is earnest! And the grave is not its goal;
Dust thou art, to dust returneth, Was not spoken of the soul. -
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
While the men of the Middle Ages look on the world as a vale of
tears, which Pope and Emperior are set to guard against the coming of
Antichrist; while the fatalists of the Renaissance oscillate between
seasons of overflowing energy and seasons of superstition or of
stupid resignation, here, in this circle of chosen spirits, the
doctrine is upheld that the visible world was created by God in love,
that it is the copy of a pattern pre-existing in Him, and that He
will ever remain its eternal mover and restorer. The soul of man can
by recognizing God draw Him into its narrow boundaries, but also by
love of Him expand itself into the Infinite - and this is blessedness
on earth. - Jacob Burckhardt
The best way to get a bad law repealed is to enforce it
strictly. - Abraham Lincoln
Faith means belief in something concerning which doubt is
theoretically possible. - William James
Mary concentrated in herself the whole rebellion of man against
fate; the whole protest against divine law; the whole contempt for
human law as its outcome; the whole unutterable fury of human nature
beating itself against the walls of its prisonhouse, and suddenly
seized by a hope that in the Virgin man had found a door of escape.
She was above law; she took feminine pleasure in turning Hell into an
ornament; she delighted in trampling on every social distinction in
this world and the next.... To her, every suppliant was a universe in
itself, to be judged apart, on his own merits, by his love for her, -
by no means on his orthodoxy, or his conventional standing in the
Church, or according to his correctness in defining the nature of the
Trinity. - Henry Adams
To educate a man in mind and not in morals is to educate a
menace to society. - Theodore Roosevelt
We shape our buildings; thereafter they shape us. -
Winston Churchill
All attempts by the State to bias the conclusions of its
citizens on disputed subjects, are evil. - John Stuart Mill
* Life is the enjoyment of
emotion, derived from the past and aimed at the future. -
Alfred North Whitehead
* Thou shalt not offend
against the notions of thy neighbor. - James Branch Cabell
Ethics, too, are nothing but reverence for life. That is what
gives me the fundamental principle of morality, namely, that good
consists in maintaining, promoting, and enhancing life, and that
destroying, injuring, and limiting life are evil. - Albert
Schweitzer
The earth no longer has in reserve, as it had once, gifted
peoples as yet unused, who can relieve us and take our place in some
distant future as leaders of the spiritual life. There is not one
among them which is not already taking such a part in our
civilization that its spiritual fate is determined by our own. All of
them, the gifted and the ungifted, the distant and the near, have
felt the influence of those forces of barbarism which are at work
among us. All of them are, like ourselves, diseased, and only as we
recover can they recover. It is not the civilization of a race, but
that of mankind, present and future alike, that we must give up as
lost, if belief in a rebirth of our civilization is a vain
thing. - Albert Schweitzer
If one believes in nothing, if nothing makes sense, if we can
assert no value whatsoever, everything is permissible and nothing is
important. - Albert Camus
[A]bsolute tolerance is altogether impossible; the
allegedly absolute tolerance turns into ferocious hatred of those who
have stated clearly and most forcefully that there are unchangeable
standards founded in the nature of man and the nature of
things. - Leo Strauss
There are no such things as limits to growth, because there are
no limits on the human capacity for intelligence, imagination and
wonder. - Ronald Reagan
Remember the Parable of the Talents in the New
Testament? Christ exhorts us to be the best we can be by
developing our skills and abilities, by succeeding in all our tasks
and endeavors. What better description can there be of
capitalism? - Margaret Thatcher
Nothing worthy can be built on a neglect of higher meanings and
on a relativistic view of concepts and culture as a whole. Indeed,
something greater than a phenomenon confined to art can be discerned
shimmering here beneath the surface - shimmering not with light but
with an ominous crimson glow. - Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
Evil people always support each other; that is their chief
strength. - Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
Towards thee I roll, thou all-destroying but unconquering
whale; to the last I grapple with thee; from hells heart I stab
at thee; for hates sake I spit my last breath at thee. -
Herman Melville
His mind was engaged in a warfare of the gods. His mind paced
outward over no-man's-land, over the fields of the slain, paced to
the rhythm of the bloods red bugles. To be alone and evil. To
be a god at bay. What was more absolute? - Mervyn Peake
Once the law is broken with impunity, each man regains the
right to any means he deems proper or necessary in order to defend
himself against the new tyrant, the one who can break the law.
- Allan Bloom
We have all of us to some extent become inured to a culture
where viciousness and depravity are simply taken for granted, like
some hideous wallpaper we have lived with for years. - Roger
Kimball
* The important thing is to
stop lying to yourself. A man who lies to himself and believes his
own lies becomes unable to recognize the truth, either in himself or
anyone else, and he ends up losing respect for himself as well as for
others. When he has no respect for anyone, he can no longer love, and
in order to divert himself, having no love in him, he yields to his
impulses, indulges in the lowest form of pleasure, and behaves like
an animal in satisfying his vices.- Fyodor Dostoyevsky
For the secret of man's being is not only to live but to have
something to live for. Without a stable conception of the object of
life, man would not consent to go on living, and would rather destroy
himself than remain on earth, though he had bread in abundance.
- Fyodor Dostoevsky
I absolutely cannot see how one can later make up for having
failed to go to a good school at the proper time. For this is what
distinguishes the hard school as a good school from all others: that
much is demanded; and sternly demanded; that the good, even the
exceptional, is demanded as the norm; that praise is rare, that
indulgence is nonexistent; that blame is apportioned sharply,
objectively, without regard for talent or antecedents. What does one
learn in a hard school? Obeying and commanding. - Friedrich
Nietzsche
* Those who are devoid of
purpose will make the void their purpose. - Friedrich
Nietzsche
The really royal calling of the philosopher (as
expressed by Alcuin the Anglo-Saxon): To correct what is wrong, and
strengthen the right, and raise what is holy. - Friedrich
Nietzsche
A resolute leader who collects ten thousand adventurers about
him can do as he pleases. Were the whole world a single Imperium, it
would thereby become merely the maximum conceivable field for the
exploits of such conquering heroes. - Oswald Spengler
One does not reflect on a point of honor - that is already
dishonor
. To submit to insult, to forget a humiliation, to
quail before an enemy - all these are signs of a life become
worthless and superfluous. - Oswald Spengler
But when Jesus was taken before Pilate, then the world of
facts and the world of truths were face to face in immediate and
implacable hostility. It is a scene appallingly distinct and
overwhelming in its symbolism, such as the world's history had never
before and has never since looked at. The discord that lies at the
root of all mobile life from its beginning, in virtue of its very
being, of its having both existence and awareness, took
here the highest form that can possibly be conceived of human
tragedy. In the famous question of the Roman Procurator: What
is truth?
lies the entire meaning of history, the
exclusive validity of the deed, the prestige of the State and war and
blood, the all-powerfulness of success and the pride of eminent
fitness. Not indeed the mouth, but the silent feeling of Jesus
answers this question by that other which is decisive in all things
of religion - What is actuality? For Pilate actuality was all;
for him nothing. Were it anything, indeed, pure religiousness could
never stand up against history and the powers of history, or sit in
judgment on active life; or if it does, it ceases to be religion and
is subjected itself to the spirit of history. My kingdom is not of
this world. This is the final word which admits of no gloss and
on which each must check the course wherein birth and nature have set
him. - Oswald Spengler
No faith yet has altered the world, and no fact can ever rebut
a faith. There is no bridge between directional Time and timeless
Eternity, between the course of history and the
existence of a divine world-order
. This is the final
meaning of the moment in which Jesus and Pilate confronted one
another. Religion is metaphysic and nothing else - Credo
quia absurdum - and this metaphysic is not the metaphysic
of knowledge, argument, proof (which is mere philosophy or
learnedness), but lived and experienced metaphysic - that is,
the unthinkable as a certainty, the supernatural as a fact, life as
existence in a world that is non-actual, but true. Jesus never lived
one moment in any other world but this. He was no moralizer, and to
see in moralizing the final aim of religion is to be ignorant of what
religion is. Moralizing is nineteenth-century Enlightenment, humane
Philistinism. To ascribe social purposes to Jesus is a blasphemy.
My kingdom is not of this world, and only he who
can look into the depths that this flash illumines can comprehend the
voices that come out of them. - Oswald Spengler
The will, the will not ever to die, the refusal to resign
oneself to death, ceaselessly builds the house of life while the keen
blasts and icy winds of reason unceasingly batter at the structure
and beat it down. - Miguel de Unamuno
He who loves his neighbor burns his heart, and the heart, like
green wood, groans when it burns, and distills itself in tears. There
is no point in taking opium; it is better to put salt and vinegar in
the souls wound, for if you fall asleep and no longer feel the
pain, then you no longer exist. And the point is to exist. -
Miguel de Unamuno
Has nature connected itself together by no bond, allowed itself
to be thus crippled, and split into the divine and human elements?
Well! there are certain divine powers of a middle nature, through
whom our aspirations are conveyed to the gods, and theirs to us. A
celestial ladder, a ladder from heaven to earth. - Walter
Pater
One must open mens eyes, not tear them out. -
Alexander Herzen
Those who want their rights respected under the Constitution
and the law ought to set the example themselves of observing the
Constitution and the law. While there may be those of high
intelligence who violate the law at times, the barbarian and the
defective always violate it. Those who disregard the rules of society
are not exhibiting a superior intelligence, are not promoting freedom
and independence, are not following the path of civilization, but are
displaying the traits of ignorance, of servitude, of savagery, and
treading the way that leads back to the jungle. - Calvin
Coolidge
* America seeks no earthly
empire built on blood and force. No ambition, no temptation, lures
her to thought of foreign dominions. The legions which she sends
forth are armed, not with the sword, but with the cross. The higher
state to which she seeks the allegiance of all mankind is not of
human, but of divine origin. She cherishes no purpose save to merit
the favor of Almighty God. - Calvin Coolidge
* For, once man is declared
the measure of all things, there is no longer a true, or
a good, or a just, but only opinions of equal validity whose clash
can be settled only by political or military force; and each force in
turn enthrones in its hour of triumph a true, a good, and a just
which will endure just as long as itself. - Bertrand de
Jouvenel
But there are no institutions on earth which enable each
separate person to have a hand in the exercise of Power, for Power is
command, and everyone cannot command. Sovereignty of the people is,
therefore, nothing but a fiction, and one which must in the long run
prove destructive of individual liberties. - Bertrand de
Jouvenel
Formality is sufficiently revenged upon the world for being so
unreasonably laughed at; it is destroyed, it is true, but it hath the
spiteful satisfaction of seeing everything destroyed with it. -
Lord Halifax
But there is no place for genuine ugliness, for final,
unresolved self-contradiction or incoherence, in a work of art as a
whole. - Louis Arnaud Reid
* We must recognize that we
are living in an imperfect world in which human and superhuman forces
of evil are at work and so long as those forces affect the political
behaviour of mankind there can be no hope of abiding peace. -
Christopher Dawson
The Soviet assumption that all other political life-forms and
beliefs were inherently and immutably hostile was the simple and
central cause of that Cold War. - Robert Conquest
In the whole vast dome of living nature there reigns an open
violence, a kind a prescriptive fury which arms all the creatures to
their common doom: as soon as you leave the inanimate kingdom you
find the decree of violent death inscribed on the very frontiers of
life.
The whole earth, perpetually steeped in blood, is nothing
but a vast altar upon which all that is living must be sacrificed
without end, without measure, without pause, until the consummation
of things, until evil is extinct, until the death of death. -
Joseph de Maistre
One must look at what [impiety] hates, what puts it in
a rage, what it attacks always, everywhere, and with fury - that will
be the truth. - Isaiah Berlin on Joseph de Maistre
When one is engaged in a desperate defense of ones world
and its values, nothing can be given away, any breach in the walls
might be fatal, every point must be defended to the death. -
Isaiah Berlin
A mans powers of creation can only be exercised fully on
his own native heath, living among men who are akin to him,
physically and spiritually, those who speak his language, amongst
whom he feels at home, with whom he feels that he belongs. -
Isaiah Berlin on Johann Herder
* It is my earnest hope and
indeed the hope of all mankind that from this solemn occasion a
better world shall emerge out of the blood and carnage of the
past.... The problem is basically theological, and involves a
spiritual recrudescence and improvement of human character that will
synchronize with our almost matchless advances in science, art, and
literature, and all material and cultural developments in the past
two thousand years. It must be of the spirit if we are to save the
flesh. - Douglas MacArthur
Insofar as ethics come into the picture, there is an emphasis
on the importance of a controlled and courteous behavior, of manners,
and of common decency, as means of redemption from the demonic
component in the physiological inner man.... If humanity is to have a
hopeful future, there is no escape from the preeminent involvement
and responsibility of the single human soul, in all its loneliness
and frailty. - George Kennan
* Indeed, unless we choose
to decentralize and to use applied science, not as the end to which
human beings are to be made the means, but as the means to producing
a race of free individuals, we have only two alternatives to choose
from: either a number of national, militarized totalitarianisms,
having as their root the terror of the atomic bomb and as their
consequence the destruction of civilization (or, if the warfare is
limited, the perpetuation of militarism); or else one supranational
totalitarianism, called into existence by the social chaos resulting
from rapid technological progress in general and the atomic
revolution in particular, and developing, under the need for
efficiency and stability, into the welfare-tyranny of Utopia. -
Aldous Huxley
The experience of a cosmos existing in precarious balance on
the edge of emergence from nothing and returning to nothing must be
acknowledged, therefore, as lying at the center of the primary
experience of the cosmos. - Eric Voegelin
Our founders understood that divine authority was necessary in
order to establish a ground on which the weak, the defenseless, the
powerless, the poor and the wretched would be able to stand, in the
face of every human power whatsoever, and demand respect for their
human rights and dignity. - Alan Keyes
A free society is regarded as one that does not engage, on
principle, in attempting to control what people find meaningful, and
a totalitarian society is regarded as one that does, on principle,
attempt such control. - Michael Polanyi
Our reliance on the validity of a scientific conclusion depends
ultimately on a judgment of coherence; and as there can exist no
strict criterion for coherence, our judgment of it must always remain
a qualitative, nonformal, tacit, personal judgment. - Michael
Polanyi
Tolerated people are never conciliated. They live on, but the
aroma of their life is lost. - George Santayana
In any close society it is more urgent to restrain others than
to be free oneself. Hence the tendency for the central authority to
absorb and supersede such as are local or delegated. - George
Santayana
Permissiveness is eventually swallowed up by some form of
tyranny because the time comes when it has nothing left to feed upon.
As, one after another, the constituted authorities erode away under
the acids of egalitarianism, the time is reached when there is
nothing any longer to be permissive about. Permissiveness is like
secularism in this respect, tonic only as long as there is still a
solid wall of the sacred against which to tilt. - Robert
Nisbet
These modern humanists are
characteristically arrogant,
opinionated, rootless, cynical, willing to sell themselves for power
and affluence, ever eager to assault the public order and disturb the
moral peace, and only too happy to sacrifice profundity, wisdom, and
learning upon the altar of brilliance. Their presence, their
incessant posturing, feuding, and caterwauling, should convince
Everyman that any relief, any rebirth and renewal of society, is not
immediately in view. - Robert Nisbet
The good life for man is the life spent in seeking for the good
life for man, and the virtues necessary for the seeking are those
which will enable us to understand what more and what else the good
life for man is. - Alasdair MacIntyre
What matters at this stage is the construction of local forms
of community within which civility and the intellectual and moral
life can be sustained through the new dark ages which are already
upon us. And if the tradition of the virtues was able to survive the
horrors of the last dark ages, we are not entirely without ground for
hope. This time however the barbarians are not waiting beyond the
frontiers; they have already been governing us for quite some
time. - Alasdair MacIntyre
* The object of persecution
is persecution. The object of torture is torture. The object of power
is power. - George Orwell
Where character forbids self-indulgence, transcendence still
hovers around. - Richard Weaver
Perilous to us all are the devices of an art deeper than we
possess ourselves. - J.R.R. Tolkien
There cannot be any story without a fall - all
stories are ultimately about the fall - at least not for human minds
as we know them and have them. - J.R.R. Tolkien
Much of the same sort of [degraded and filthy] talk can
still be heard among the orc-minded; dreary and repetitive with
hatred and contempt, too long removed from good to retain even verbal
vigour, save in the ears of those to whom only the squalid sounds
strong. - J.R.R. Tolkien
Let us not rail about justice as long as we have arms and the
freedom to use them. - Frank Herbert
Mankind has only one science. Its the science of
discontent. - Frank Herbert
Without anguish of the spirit, which is a wordless experience,
there are no meanings anywhere. - Frank Herbert
The people had the attitude of a subject population, not the
attitude of free men. They were defensive, concealing, evasive. Any
manifestation of authority was subject to resentment - any
authority. - Frank Herbert
A large populace held in check by a small but powerful force is
quite a common situation in our universe. And we know the major
conditions wherein this large populace may turn upon its keepers -
One: when they find a leader. This is the most volatile threat to the
powerful; they must retain control of the leaders. Two: When the
populace recognizes its chains. Keep the populace blind and
unquestioning. Three: When the populace perceives a hope of escape
from bondage. They must never even believe that escape is
possible. - Frank Herbert
Technology breeds anarchy. It distributes these tools at
random. And with them goes the provocation for violence. The ability
to make and use savage destroyers falls inevitably into the hands of
smaller and smaller groups until at last the group is a single
individual. - Frank Herbert
Four sorrows, it seems to me, are certain to be visited on the
United States. Their cumulative effect guarantees that the U.S. will
cease to resemble the country outlined in the Constitution of 1787.
First, there will be a state of perpetual war, leading to more
terrorism against Americans wherever they may be and a spreading
reliance on nuclear weapons among smaller nations as they try to ward
off the imperial juggernaut. Second is a loss of democracy and
Constitutional rights as the presidency eclipses Congress and is
itself transformed from a co-equal 'executive branch' of government
into a military junta. Third is the replacement of truth by
propaganda, disinformation, and the glorification of war, power, and
the military legions. Lastly, there is bankruptcy, as the United
States pours its economic resources into ever more grandiose military
projects and shortchanges the education, health, and safety of its
citizens. - Chalmers Johnson
Either the material order is the whole of being, wherein all
transcendence is an illusion, or it is the phenomenal surface -
mysterious, beautiful, terrible, harsh, and haunting - of a world of
living spirits.... [O]ne should... be able to recognize
that it is only the latter view that has ever had the power - over
centuries and in every realm of human accomplishment - to summon
desire beyond the boring limits marked by mortality, to endow the
will with constancy and purpose, and to shape imagination towards
ends that should not be possible within the narrow economies of the
flesh. - David B. Hart