“Power confuses itself with virtue and tends also to take itself for omnipotence.”
Source: The Arrogance of Power (1966), p. 4
“Power confuses itself with virtue and tends also to take itself for omnipotence.”
Source: The Arrogance of Power (1966), p. 4
Source: The Arrogance of Power (1966), p. 245
Regarding radicals of the right, “Public Policy and Military Responsibility,” speech at the opening session of the National War College and the Industrial College of the Armed Forces, Washington, D.C., August 21, 1961, Congressional Record, vol. 107, p. 16444.
"The Legislator," lecture delivered at the University of Chicago (1946), edited for the Committee on Social Thought by Robert B. Heywood, p. 119 (1947)