
What Does the Working Man Want? (speech), Louisville, KY (May 1890)
Encounters with Animals (1958)
Context: There would be a dreadful outcry if anyone suggested obliterating, say, the Tower of London, and quite rightly so; yet a unique and wonderful species of animal which has taken hundreds of thousands of years to develop to the stage we see today, can be snuffed out like a candle without more than a handful of people raising a finger or a voice in protest. So, until we consider animal life to be worthy of the consideration and reverence we bestow upon old books and pictures and historic monuments, there will always be the animal refugee living a precarious life on the edge of extermination, dependent for existence on the charity of a few human beings.
What Does the Working Man Want? (speech), Louisville, KY (May 1890)
“War Isn’t This Century’s Biggest Killer, The Wall Street Journal (July 7, 1986)
Address to the Pan Pacific HIV/AIDS Conference, Auckland, New Zealand, October 2005
Source: The Light of Day (1900), Ch. X: Religious Truth
Source: His Dark Materials, The Amber Spyglass (2000), Ch. 2 : Balthamos and Baruch
Context: Will considered what to do. When you choose one way out of many, all the ways you don’t take are snuffed out like candles, as if they’d never existed. At the moment all Will’s choices existed at once. But to keep them all in existence meant doing nothing. He had to choose, after all.
p, 125
Sudden Origins: Fossils, Genes, and the Emergence of Species (1999)
Source: The Ape that Thought It Was a Peacock: Does Evolutionary Psychology Exaggerate Human Sex Differences? (2013), p. 147