Alice A. Bailey (1880–1949) esoteric, theosophist, writer
Source: The Unfinished Autobiography (1951), Chapter 6
Man in the Modern Age (1933)
Context: Imminent seems the collapse of that which for millennium has constituted man's universe. The new world which has arisen as an apparatus for supply of the necessaries of life compels everything and everyone to serve it. It annihilates whatever it has no place for person seems to be going undergoing absorption into that which is nothing more than a means to an end, into that which is devoid of purpose of significance. <!-- p. 79
Alice A. Bailey (1880–1949) esoteric, theosophist, writer
Source: The Unfinished Autobiography (1951), Chapter 6
Richard Dawkins (1941) English ethologist, evolutionary biologist and author
The Richard Dimbleby Lecture: Science, Delusion and the Appetite for Wonder (1996)
Dean Acheson book Present at the Creation: My Years in the State Department
Present at the Creation: My Years in the State Department (1969), Truman Doctrine, Cold War
Niall Ferguson (1964) British historian
"TED Talks: Niall Ferguson" http://www.ted.com/speakers/niall_ferguson.html TED
Guy Debord (1931–1994) French Marxist theorist, writer, filmmaker and founding member of the Situationist International (SI)
Vol. 1, Pt. 2.
Panegyric (1989)
Stephen Hawking book The Large Scale Structure of Space-Time
with G.F.R. Ellis, "The Large Scale Structure of Space-Time" (1973) Preface
Theodore Parker (1810–1860) abolitionist
Ten Sermons of Religion (1853), III : Of Justice and the Conscience https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Ten_Sermons_of_Religion/Of_Justice_and_the_Conscience <br class="br">Context: Justice is the constitution or fundamental law of the moral universe, the law of right, a rule of conduct for man in all his moral relations. Accordingly all human affairs must be subject to that as the law paramount; what is right agrees therewith and stands, what is wrong conflicts and falls. Private cohesions of self-love, of friendship, or of patriotism, must all be subordinate to this universal gravitation towards the eternal right.
“All that has by nature, with systematic method, been arranged in the universe, seems”
Nicomachus (60–120) Ancient Greek mathematician
Nicomachus of Gerasa: Introduction to Arithmetic (1926)
Context: All that has by nature, with systematic method, been arranged in the universe, seems both in part and as a whole to have been determined and ordered in accordance with number, by the forethought and the mind of him that created all things; for the pattern was fixed, like a preliminary sketch, by the domination of number preëxistent in the mind of the world-creating God, number conceptual only and immaterial in every way, but at the same time the true and the eternal essence, so that with reference to it, as to an artistic plan, should be created all these things: time, motion, the heavens, the stars, all sorts of revolutions.<!--Book I, Chapter VI