“God wants to help us and will bear our burdens.”
Where Is God (2009, Thomas Nelson publishers)
Pt. III, Form; § 30: "The average modified in the direction of pleasure.", p. 125
The Sense of Beauty (1896)
Context: In fact, the whole machinery of our intelligence, our general ideas and laws, fixed and external objects, principles, persons, and gods, are so many symbolic, algebraic expressions. They stand for experience; experience which we are incapable of retaining and surveying in its multitudinous immediacy. We should flounder hopelessly, like the animals, did we not keep ourselves afloat and direct our course by these intellectual devices. Theory helps us to bear our ignorance of fact.
“God wants to help us and will bear our burdens.”
Where Is God (2009, Thomas Nelson publishers)
“There was a time when only wise books were read
helping us to bear our pain and misery.”
"Ars Poetica?"
Context: There was a time when only wise books were read
helping us to bear our pain and misery.
This, after all, is not quite the same
as leafing through a thousand works fresh from psychiatric clinics. And yet the world is different from what it seems to be
and we are other than how we see ourselves in our ravings.
“What are friends for, if not to help bear our sins?”
Source: The Complete Fiction of Nella Larsen: Passing, Quicksand, and the Stories
" The Influence Of Women On The Progress Of Knowledge http://www.public.coe.edu/~theller/soj/u-rel/buckle.html". Lecture given at the Royal Institution 19 March 1858. In: The Miscellaneous and Posthumous Works of Henry Thomas Buckle (1872)
Source: Toward a general theory of action (1951), p. 3
“As a matter of fact, we are none of us above criticism; so let us bear with each other's faults.”
Source: The Marvelous Land of Oz
“As a rule we disbelieve all the facts and theories for which we have no use.”
"The Will to Believe" p. 10 http://books.google.com/books?id=Moqh7ktHaJEC&pg=PA10
1890s, The Will to Believe and Other Essays in Popular Philosophy (1897)
“As a rule we disbelieve all the facts and theories for which we have no use.”
William James, in The Will to Believe (1897)
Misattributed
"applied economics"
Source: The Globalization of Poverty and the New World Order - Second Edition - (2003), Chapter 2, Global Falsehoods, p. 27