“The moral world has no particular objection to vice, but an insuperable repugnance to hearing vice called by its proper name.”
Source: Vanity Fair
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William Makepeace Thackeray69
novelist 1811–1863Related quotes
“For vice has this defect; it cannot be truly intelligent. Its very motives are its weakness.”
Robert A. Heinlein book Lost Legacy
Lost Legacy (p. 339)
Short fiction, Off the Main Sequence (2005)
Henry Fountain Ashurst (1874–1962) United States Senator from Arizona
"Arizona's Pioneer Senator". New York Times (June 1, 1962)
“When law becomes despotic, morals are relaxed, and vice versa.”
Honoré de Balzac (1799–1850) French writer
Quand le despotisme est dans les lois, la liberté se trouve dans les mœurs, et vice versa.
The Wild Ass’s Skin (1831), Part I: The Talisman
Bernard Mandeville (1670–1733) Anglo-Dutch writer and physician
Dr. Johnson in conversation, April 15, 1778, reported in James Boswell, The Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1791) p. 948.
Criticism
“Any virtue systematically applied becomes a vice. Morality is attention, not system.”
James Richardson (1950) American poet
#398
Vectors: Aphorisms and Ten Second Essays (2001)
“Freedom is the name of virtue: Slavery, of vice…. None is a slave whose acts are free.”
Epictetus (50–138) philosopher from Ancient Greece
Fragment x.
Golden Sayings of Epictetus, Fragments
George Holmes Howison (1834–1916) American philosopher
Source: The Limits of Evolution, and Other Essays, Illustrating the Metaphysical Theory of Personal Ideaalism (1905), The Harmony of Determinism and Freedom, p.361
“Vice does not lose its character by becoming fashionable.”
John Wesley (1703–1791) Christian theologian