"Thoughts of a Free Thinker", commencement address, Hobart and William Smith Colleges (26 May 1974)
Palm Sunday (1981)
Context: What we will be seeking … for the rest of our lives will be large, stable communities of like-minded people, which is to say relatives. They no longer exist. The lack of them is not only the main cause, but probably the only cause of our shapeless discontent in the midst of such prosperity.
“A large part of the relativity community is in denial”
refusing even to contemplate the idea that black holes may not exist in nature, or seriously consider the idea that any kind of new matter such as the new putative dark energy can play a fundamental role in gravity theory.
Source: Reinventing Gravity (2008), Chapter 14, Do Black Holes Exist In Nature?, p. 204
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John Moffat 22
British-Canadian physicist 1932Related quotes
a few years later https://books.google.ca/books?id=3jjNW-_TnusC&pg=PA176
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Source: Taxation No Tyranny https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Taxation_No_Tyranny (1775)
1990s, Speech to the Council for National Policy (1997)
“Rhythm includes metre, but metre is a relatively small part of rhythm.”
Anatomy of Poetry (1953)
Religious Belief and Public Morality (1984)
Context: Almost all Americans accept some religious values as a part of our public life. We are a religious people, many of us descended from ancestors who came here expressly to live their religious faith free from coercion or repression. But we are also a people of many religions, with no established church, who hold different beliefs on many matters.
Our public morality, then — the moral standards we maintain for everyone, not just the ones we insist on in our private lives — depends on a consensus view of right and wrong. The values derived from religious belief will not — and should not — be accepted as part of the public morality unless they are shared by the pluralistic community at large, by consensus.
That those values happen to be religious values does not deny them acceptability as a part of this consensus. But it does not require their acceptability, either.
[Richards, I. A., Principles of Literary Criticism, 1924]
Principles of Literary Criticism
Interview: Dan Deacon http://wxjm.org/interview-dan-deacon/ (April 19, 2015)
“A large part of mankind is angry not with the sins, but with the sinners.”
Magna pars hominum est quae non peccatis irascitur, sed peccantibus.
De Ira (On Anger): Book 2, cap. 28, line 8
Moral Essays