
Quoted by Marilyn Ferguson in The Aquarian Conspiracy, Chapter 5 (1980)
Source: Persuasion
Quoted by Marilyn Ferguson in The Aquarian Conspiracy, Chapter 5 (1980)
Source: The Relevance of Manipulation to the Process of Perception, 1977, p. 133
Source: Memoirs of a Superfluous Man (1943), p. 34
Context: Our preceptors were gentlemen as well as scholars. There was not a grain of sentimentalism in the institution; on the other hand, the place was permeated by a profound sense of justice. … An equalitarian and democratic regime must by consequence assume, tacitly or avowedly, that everybody is educable. The theory of our regime was directly contrary to this. Our preceptors did not see that doctrines of equality and democracy had any footing in the premises. They did not pretend to believe that everyone is educable, for they knew, on the contrary, that very few are educable, very few indeed. They saw this as a fact of nature, like the fact that few are six feet tall. … They accepted the fact that there are practicable ranges of intellectual and spiritual experience which nature has opened to some and closed to others.
Response to atheist Alfred Kerr in the winter of 1927, who after deriding ideas of God and religion at a dinner party in the home of the publisher Samuel Fischer, had queried him "I hear that you are supposed to be deeply religious" as quoted in The Diary of a Cosmopolitan (1971) by H. G. Kessler
Source: 1920s, p. 157 London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson
An Essay on the Nature and Conduct of the Passions and Affections (1728), Treatise II: Illustrations upon the Moral Sense, Sect. I
“Religious experiences which are as real as life to some may be incomprehensible to others.”
United States v. Ballard, 322 U.S. 78 (1944)
Judicial opinions
Rex v. Inhabitants of Caverswall (1758), Burrow (Settlement Cases), 465.