Source: The Power of Myth (book), p. 28
Context: Now, what is a myth? The dictionary definition of a myth would be stories about gods. So then you have to ask the next question: What is a god? A god is a personification of a motivating power or a value system that functions in human life and in the universe - the powers if your own body and of nature.
“The right to hope is the most powerful human motivation I know.”
Baccalaureate Address at Brown University Delivered by His Highness the Aga Khan, Providence, Rhode Island, United States of America (26 May 1996) http://www.brown.edu/Administration/News_Bureau/1995-96/95-147t.html
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Aga Khan IV 26
49th and current Imam of Nizari Ismailism 1936Related quotes
“I know nothing of man’s rights, or woman’s rights; human rights are all that I recognise.”
Letter 15 (October 20, 1837).
Letters on the Equality of the Sexes and the Condition of Woman (1837)
“Hope is human natural right but they have to keep it.”
https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/8314474-hope-is-human-natural-right-but-they-have-to-keep
Fragmentary manuscript of a speech on free labor (17 September 1859?) http://quod.lib.umich.edu/l/lincoln/lincoln3/1:141?rgn=div1;view=fulltext; The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln, ed. Roy P. Basler (1953), vol. 3, pp. 463–464
1850s
Context: Free labor has the inspiration of hope; pure slavery has no hope. The power of hope upon human exertion, and happiness, is wonderful. The slave-master himself has a conception of it; and hence the system of tasks among slaves. The slave whom you can not drive with the lash to break seventy-five pounds of hemp in a day, if you will task him to break a hundred, and promise him pay for all he does over, he will break you a hundred and fifty. You have substituted hope, for the rod. And yet perhaps it does not occur to you, that to the extent of your gain in the case, you have given up the slave system, and adopted the free system of labor.
In another of his speeches on Indian tradition quoted in "Jayachamaraja Wodeyar – A Princely scholar".
p, 125
Reflections on the Motive Power of Heat (1824)