“Whereas reasons may, and usually do, figure among the proximate causes of belief, and thus play a part in both kinds of series (cognitive and causal), it is always possible to trace back the causal series to a point where every trace of rationality vanishes; where we are left face to face with conditions of beliefs social, physiological, and physical— which, considered in themselves, are quite a-logical in their character. /…/ on any merely naturalistic hypothesis, the rational elements in the causal series lie always on the surface. Penetrate but a short way down, and they are found no more.”
Theism and humanism
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Arthur James Balfour 48
British Conservative politician and statesman 1848–1930Related quotes

“Implication is thus the very texture of our web of belief, and logic is the theory that traces it.”
S. 41
The Web of Belief (1970)

"The Hermeneutics of Suspicion: Recovering Marx, Nietzsche, and Freud"
Visions of Politics (2002), "Interpretation, rationality and truth"

the necessary and sufficient conditions for rational knowledge
Source: Great Islamic Encyclopedia website, 2016 https://www.cgie.org.ir/fa/news/154958

Source: Italian Fascism and Developmental Dictatorship, (1979), p. 119

Indeed, we must derive the relations of causality from experience; but we must not fail to correct and to complete our conception of these facts of experience by reflection.
Causality
Gesammelte Mathematische Werke (1876)

Source: Law in Modern Societyː Toward a Criticism of Social Theory (1976), p. 245