“Immanuel Kant lived with knowledge as with his lawfully wedded wife, slept with it in the same intellectual bed for forty years and begot an entire German race of philosophical systems.”
The Struggle with the Demon [Der Kampf mit dem Daemon] (1929), p. 256, as translated by Marion Sonnenfeld
Help us to complete the source, original and additional information
Stefan Zweig 106
Austrian writer 1881–1942Related quotes

Selected works, Spinoza and Buddha: Visions of a Dead God (1933)

S. M. Melamed, Spinoza and Buddha: Visions of a Dead God (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1933)
M - R
“Madelyne, we're married now. 'Tis a usual occurrence to bed one's wife on the wedding night.”
Source: Honor's Splendour

As quoted in Parted Lips : Lesbian Love Quotes Through the Ages (2002) by Simone Rich
Hartshorne (1958) "The concept of geography as a science of space, from Kant and Humboldt to Hettner" in: Annals of the Association of American Geographers Vol 48 (2). p. 97
Hayek's Journey: The Mind of Friedrich Hayek (2003)

“Knowledge increases autonomy both in the sense of Kant, and in that of Spinoza and his followers.”
Five Essays on Liberty (2002), From Hope and Fear Set Free (1964)
Context: Knowledge increases autonomy both in the sense of Kant, and in that of Spinoza and his followers. I should like to ask once more: is all liberty just that? The advance of knowledge stops men from wasting their resources upon delusive projects. It has stopped us from burning witches or flogging lunatics or predicting the future by listening to oracles or looking at the entrails of animals or the flight of birds. It may yet render many institutions and decisions of the present – legal, political, moral, social – obsolete, by showing them to be as cruel and stupid and incompatible with the pursuit of justice or reason or happiness or truth as we now think the burning of widows or eating the flesh of an enemy to acquire skills. If our powers of prediction, and so our knowledge of the future, become much greater, then, even if they are never complete, this may radically alter our view of what constitutes a person, an act, a choice; and eo ipso our language and our picture of the world. This may make our conduct more rational, perhaps more tolerant, charitable, civilised, it may improve it in many ways, but will it increase the area of free choice? For individuals or groups?

“Widowed wife and wedded maid.”
The Betrothed, Chap. xv.
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919)