“Values are a broad tendency to prefer certain states of affairs over others.”
Source: Culture's consequences: International differences in work-related values (1980), p. 19.
Hinduism and monotheistic religions (2009)
“Values are a broad tendency to prefer certain states of affairs over others.”
Source: Culture's consequences: International differences in work-related values (1980), p. 19.
“It is indisputable that the blacks have benefited from certain benefits of civilization.”
The visit of King Albert I to the Belgian Congo in 1928. Between propaganda and reality. https://www.congoforum.be/Upldocs/Het_bezoek_van_koning_Albert_I_aan_Belgi.compressed.pdf
“I prefer thought to action, an idea to a transaction, contemplation to activity.”
Je préfère la pensée à l'action, une idée à une affaire, la contemplation au mouvement.
Louis Lambert (1832), as translated by Clara Bell
Source: The Martyrdom of Man (1872), Chapter III, "Liberty", p. 315.
… What excellent advice it is, and how it was beaten into my generation of schoolboys... But one may tire of even the best advice, as one may tire of writing according to these precepts. Would we wish to be without the heraldic splendour and torchlight processions that are the sentences of Sir Thomas Browne? Would we wish to sacrifice the orotund, Latinate pronouncements of Samuel Johnson? Would we wish that Dickens had written in the style recommended by the brothers Fowler, who framed the rules I have quoted; what would then have happened to Seth Pecksniff, Wilkins Micawber, and Sairey Gamp, I ask you?
Writing (1990), he here quotes from The King's English (1906) by Henry Watson Fowler & Francis George Fowler
Van Gogh, the Man Suicided by Society (1947)