Edward Bulwer-Lytton (1803–1873) English novelist, poet, playwright, and politician
Caxtoniana: Hints on Mental Culture (1862)
Edward Bulwer-Lytton (1803–1873) English novelist, poet, playwright, and politician
Caxtoniana: Hints on Mental Culture (1862)
Auberon Herbert (1838–1906) British politician
The Principles of Voluntaryism and Free Life
K. Sri Dhammananda Maha Thera (1919–2006) Sri Lankan Buddhist monk
"Real Charity"
What Buddhists Believe (1993)
C.G. Jung (1875–1961) Swiss psychiatrist and psychotherapist who founded analytical psychology
Paracelsus the Physician (1942)
Context: No one can flatter himself that he is immune to the spirit of his own epoch, or even that he possesses a full understanding of it. Irrespective of our conscious convictions, each one of us, without exception, being a particle of the general mass, is somewhere attached to, colored by, or even undermined by the spirit which goes through the mass. Freedom stretches only as far as the limits of our consciousness.
“An Anarchist is one who minds his own business.”
Elbert Hubbard (1856–1915) American writer, publisher, artist, and philosopher fue el escritor del jarron azul
The Better Part (1901)
Context: I AM an Anarchist.
All good men are Anarchists.
All cultured, kindly men; all gentlemen; all just men are Anarchists.
Jesus was an Anarchist.
A Monarchist is one who believes a monarch should govern. A Plutocrat believes in the rule of the rich. A Democrat holds that the majority should dictate. An Aristocrat thinks only the wise should decide; while an Anarchist does not believe in government at all. Richard Croker is a Monarchist; Mark Hanna a Plutocrat; Cleveland a Democrat; Cabot Lodge an Aristocrat; William Penn, Henry D. Thoreau, Bronson Alcott and Walt Whitman were Anarchists. An Anarchist is one who minds his own business. An Anarchist does not believe in sending warships across wide oceans to kill brown men, and lay waste rice fields, and burn the homes of people who are fighting for liberty. An Anarchist does not drive women with babes at their breasts and other women with babes unborn, children and old men into the jungle to be devoured by beasts or fever or fear, or die of hunger, homeless, unhouseled and undone.
Destruction, violence, ravages, murder, are perpetrated by statute law..
René Girard (1923–2015) French historian, literary critic, and philosopher of social science
Source: I See Satan Fall Like Lightning