“At last, the wheel comes full circle”
Cassandra Clare book Clockwork Princess
Source: Clockwork Princess
Source: Philosophy At The Limit (1990), Chapter 5, Nietzsche's Styles, p. 95
“At last, the wheel comes full circle”
Cassandra Clare book Clockwork Princess
Source: Clockwork Princess
Pierre Hadot (1922–2010) French historian and philosopher
trans. Michael Chase, p. 271
La Philosophie comme manière de vivre (2001)
Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882–1945) 32nd President of the United States
1930s, Address at Chautauqua, New York (1936)
Robert Hunter (author) (1874–1942) American sociologist, author, golf course architect
Source: Why We Fail as Christians (1919), p. 75
Context: Tolstoy, after all his search for truth, came to the conclusion that individual perfection is the thing to strive for. One must save one's own soul. Struggling apparently to annihilate self, Tolstoy pursued the circle of his philosophy until he came back to the point of deifying Self. In placing such emphasis upon individual regeneration, Tolstoy departed from the teaching of the gospels.
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel book Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences
Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences (1816)
James Branch Cabell book The Cream of the Jest
The Epilogue : Which is the proper ending of all comedies; and heralds, it may be, an afterpiece.
The Cream of the Jest (1917)
Context: It is true I have not told you everything. Why should I? No Author ever does.... With Felix Kennaston — or, if you prefer it so, with Horvendile, — rests safe this secret and peculiar knowledge as to how the life of Manuel may yet repair to it's first home after some seven centuries of exile. Thus will the traveller return — by and by — to the place of his starting; the legend of the second coming of the Redeemer will be justified, in, at all events, my lesser world; and the tale to Manuel's life will have come again, as it did once beside the pool of Haranton, full circle.
Howard P. Robertson (1903–1961) American mathematician and physicist
Geometry as a Branch of Physics (1949)
Karl Barth (1886–1968) Swiss Protestant theologian
Karl Barth Protestant Thought From Rousseau to Ritschl, 1952, 1959 p. 284-285
Protestant Thought From Rousseau to Ritschl 1952, 1956