“Modern publication wishes to minimize discussion. … Phrases … are carefully chosen not to stimulate reflection, but to evoke stock responses of approbation or disapprobation. Headlines and advertising teem with them, and we seem to approach a point at which failure to make the stock response is regarded as faintly treasonable.”
Source: Ideas have Consequences (1948), pp. 96-97.
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Richard M. Weaver 110
American scholar 1910–1963Related quotes

Source: The Intelligent Investor: The Classic Text on Value Investing (1949), Chapter I, What the Intelligent Investor Can Accomplish, p. 18

Source: Political Treatise (1677), Ch. 10, Of Aristocracy, Conclusion
Variant translation : Laws which can be broken without any wrong to one's neighbor are but a laughing-stoke ; and, so far from such laws restraining the appetites and lusts of mankind, they rather heighten them.
Variant: All laws which can be violated without doing any one any injury are laughed at. Nay, so far are they from doing anything to control the desires and passions of men, that, on the contrary, they direct and incite men's thoughts the more toward those very objects, for we always strive toward what is forbidden and desire the things we are not allowed to have. And men of leisure are never deficient in the ingenuity needed to enable them to outwit laws framed to regulate things which cannot be entirely forbidden... He who tries to determine everything by law will foment crime rather than lessen it.

"A Crash Course for Central Bankers," Foreign Policy (September/October 2000)

“God isn't interested in stock phrases. Talk to him. Talk to the Father sincerely.”
Too Busy Not to Pray (2008, InterVarsity Press)

Source: 1960s, Counterblast (1969), p. 106

Vol. I, Ch. 31, pg. 827.
(Buch I) (1867)