
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 238.
Source: Bumped
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 238.
“We prove what we want to prove, and the real difficulty is to know what we want to prove.”
On prouve tout ce qu'on veut, et la vraie difficulté est de savoir ce qu'on veut prouver.
Système des Beaux-Arts (1920), as quoted in The Most Brilliant Thoughts of All Time (In Two Lines or Less) by John M. Shanahan, p. 34
Variant translation: We prove anything we want to prove, and the real difficulty is to know what we want to prove.
“Faith ― acceptance of which we imagine to be true, that which we cannot prove.”
Source: The Da Vinci Code
2000s, A Challenge to Overcome (November 2007)
Frankfurt Book Fair speech (2003)
“It is surely harmful to souls to make it a heresy to believe what is proved.”
“Our passing life that we have here in our sense-soul knoweth not what our Self is.”
Summations, Chapter 46
Context: Our passing life that we have here in our sense-soul knoweth not what our Self is. Then shall we verily and clearly see and know our Lord God in fulness of joy. And therefore it behoveth needs to be that the nearer we be to our bliss, the more we shall long; and that both by nature and by grace. We may have knowing of our Self in this life by continuant help and virtue of our high Nature. In which knowing we may exercise and grow, by forwarding and speeding of mercy and grace; but we may never fully know our Self until the last point: in which point this passing life and manner of pain and woe shall have an end. And therefore it belongeth properly to us, both by nature and by grace, to long and desire with all our mights to know our Self in fulness of endless joy.