Source: Anarcho-Syndicalism (1938), Ch. 1 "Anarchism: Its Aims and Purposes"
Context: Anarchism is no patent solution for all human problems, no Utopia of a perfect social order, as it has so often been called, since on principle it rejects all absolute schemes and concepts. It does not believe in any absolute truth, or in definite final goals for human development, but in an unlimited perfectibility of social arrangements and human living conditions, which are always straining after higher forms of expression, and to which for this reason one can assign no definite terminus nor set any fixed goal. The worst crime of any type of state is just that it always tries to force the rich diversity of social life into definite forms and adjust it to one particular form, which allows for no wider outlook and regards the previously exciting status as finished. The stronger its supporters feel themselves, the more completely they succeed in bringing every field of social life into their service, the more crippling is their influence on the operation of all creative cultural forces, the more unwholesomely does it affect the intellectual and social development of any particular epoch.
“Age is just a number, not a state of mind or a reason for any type of particular behaviour.”
Source: Love, Rosie
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Cecelia Ahern 156
Irish novelist 1981Related quotes
Comment made after Salisbury lost power to Gladstone in 1892, quoted in Queen Victoria: A Biographical Companion by Helen Rappaport (2003), p. 331 http://books.google.com/books?id=NLGhimIiFPoC&lpg=PP1&pg=PA331#v=onepage&q&f=false.
Source: Assigning Meanings to Programs http://www.cs.virginia.edu/~weimer/2007-615/reading/FloydMeaning.pdf (1967), p. 21 [italics in original, math symbols omitted].
“The number one crime in any age: offending the money.”
Source: Saturn's Children (2008), Chapter 16, “Long-Lost Sibs” (p. 268)
“Reason operates critically in any number of different ways.”
Source: Dynamics Of Theology, Chapter Two, Faith and the Community of Beliefs, p. 39
Source: General System Theory (1968), 2. The Meaning of General Systems Theory, p. 37
Source: Principles of industrial organization, 1913, p. 41-42