2008-05-17 http://ippmedia.com/ipp/guardian/2008/05/17/114573.html
2008
“… the pattern of embarrassment behind the contemporary ideal of a language that will best promote good action by entirely eliminating the element of exhortation or command. Insofar as such a project succeeded, its terms would involve a narrowing of circumference to a point where the principle of personal action is eliminated from language, so that an act would follow from it only as a non-sequitur, a kind of humanitarian after-thought.”
Source: A Grammar of Motives (1945), p. 90
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Kenneth Burke 11
American philosopher 1897–1993Related quotes
“Thought is the blossom; language the bud; action the fruit behind it.”
Ch 4
A Canticle for Leibowitz (1959), Fiat Homo
Context: How easy it would have been flatly to have told the boy that his pilgrim was only an old tramp of some kind, and then to have commanded him not to think otherwise. But by allowing the boy to see that a question was possible, he had rendered such a command ineffective before he uttered it. Insofar as thought could be governed at all, it could only be commanded to follow what reason affirmed anyhow; command it otherwise, and it would not obey.
Source: Seth, Dreams & Projections of Consciousness, (1986), p. 322, quoting from Session 262
Volume 2, Ch. 1
Fiction, The Book of the Long Sun (1993–1996)
Mocking the w:Proto-World language hypothesis in an essay http://www.zompist.com/langorg.htm
“Ecofeminism and the Eating of Animals”, in Ecological Feminist Philosophies, edited by Karen J. Warren (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1996), p. 125.