“An aristocrat in morals as in mind.”
Owen Wister (1860–1938) American writer
About Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., in Roosevelt: The Story of a Friendship (1930), p. 130.
I had noted in my teens that major writers are usually those who have had to struggle against the odds -- to "pull their cart out of the mud," as I put it -- while writers who have had an easy start in life are usually second rate -- or at least, not quite first-rate. Dickens, Balzac, Dostoevsky, Shaw, H. G. Wells, are examples of the first kind; in the twentieth century, John Galsworthy, Graham Greene, Evelyn Waugh, and Samuel Beckett are examples of the second kind. They are far from being mediocre writers; yet they tend to be tinged with a certain pessimism that arises from never having achieved a certain resistance against problems.
Source: The Books in My Life (1998), p. 188
“An aristocrat in morals as in mind.”
Owen Wister (1860–1938) American writer
About Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., in Roosevelt: The Story of a Friendship (1930), p. 130.
Georg Brandes (1842–1927) Danish literature critic and scholar
Source: An Essay on Aristocratic Radicalism (1889), pp. 30-31
Michael Shermer book The Science of Good and Evil
[Shermer, The Science of Good and Evil: Why People Cheat, Share, Gossip, and Follow the Golden Rule, 1st edition, 2004, Times Books, New York, ISBN 0805075208, 18]
“The problem is that everybody treats teenagers like they're stupid.”
Johnny Depp (1963) American actor, film producer, and musician
Garrett Hardin (1915–2003) American ecologist
Tragedy of the Commons ( read on-line http://science.sciencemag.org/content/162/3859/1243.full), 1968. <br class="br">Tragedy of the Commons (1968)
Theodor W. Adorno (1903–1969) German sociologist, philosopher and musicologist known for his critical theory of society
Source: Wozu noch Philosophie? [Why still philosophy?] (1963), p. 7
Jessica Bird (1969) U.S. novelist
Source: Lover Enshrined
Margaret Sanger (1879–1966) American birth control activist, educator and nurse
"Morality and Birth Control", February-March, 1918, pp. 11,14.
Birth Control Review, 1918-32