“No one believes a liar. Even when she's telling the truth.”
Sara Shepard (1973) Author
Source: Heartless
“No one believes a liar. Even when she's telling the truth.”
Sara Shepard (1973) Author
Source: Heartless
“When no one you know tells the truth, you learn to see under the surface.”
Cassandra Clare book Lady Midnight
Source: Lady Midnight
Baruch Spinoza (1632–1677) Dutch philosopher
Letter 56 (60), to Hugo Boxel (1674) http://oll.libertyfund.org/?option=com_staticxt&staticfile=show.php%3Ftitle=1711&chapter=144218&layout=html&Itemid=27 <br class="br">Source: The Letters <br class="br">Context: When you say that if I deny, that the operations of seeing, hearing, attending, wishing, &c., can be ascribed to God, or that they exist in him in any eminent fashion, you do not know what sort of God mine is; I suspect that you believe there is no greater perfection than such as can be explained by the aforesaid attributes. I am not astonished; for I believe that, if a triangle could speak, it would say, in like manner, that God is eminently triangular, while a circle would say that the divine nature is eminently circular. Thus each would ascribe to God its own attributes, would assume itself to be like God, and look on everything else as ill-shaped.<br>The briefness of a letter and want of time do not allow me to enter into my opinion on the divine nature, or the questions you have propounded. Besides, suggesting difficulties is not the same as producing reasons. That we do many things in the world from conjecture is true, but that our redactions are based on conjecture is false. In practical life we are compelled to follow what is most probable; in speculative thought we are compelled to follow truth. A man would perish of hunger and thirst, if he refused to eat or drink, till he had obtained positive proof that food and drink would be good for him. But in philosophic reflection this is not so. On the contrary, we must take care not to admit as true anything, which is only probable. For when one falsity has been let in, infinite others follow.<br>Again, we cannot infer that because sciences of things divine and human are full of controversies and quarrels, therefore their whole subject-matter is uncertain; for there have been many persons so enamoured of contradiction, as to turn into ridicule geometrical axioms.
“Truth has never been, can never be, contained in any one creed or system.”
Mary Augusta Ward book Robert Elsmere
Robert Elsmere. Book vi. Chap. xxxviii, reported in Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919).
“If one tells the truth, one is sure, sooner or later, to be found out.”
Oscar Wilde book Phrases and Philosophies for the Use of the Young
Phrases and Philosophies for the Use of the Young (1894)
“In a myriad of ways you tell one truth.”
Dejan Stojanovic (1959) poet, writer, and businessman
"The Bell of the Shape," p. 35
The Shape (2000), Sequence: “Bells”
“Evil is the moment when I lack the strength to be true to the Good that compels me.”
Alain Badiou (1937) French writer and philosopher
Source: Ethics: An Essay on the Understanding of Evil
Halldór Laxness book Kristnihald undir Jökli (bók)
Bishop
Kristnihald undir Jökli (Under the Glacier/Christianity at Glacier) (1968)