“To give a reason for anything is to breed a doubt of it…”
"On the Difference Between Writing and Speaking"
The Plain Speaker (1826)
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William Hazlitt 186
English writer 1778–1830Related quotes

Haidakhan Babaji, as quoted in "The legend of Herakhan Baba", by Dio Urmilla Neff in Yoga Journal, No. 32 (May-June 1980), p. 53; Haidakhan Babaji's claims to be Mahavatar Babaji/Hariakhan Baba are disputed by the Self-Realization Fellowship founded by Paramahansa Yogananda.
Disputed

Jokes and their Relation to the Cognitive Unconscious (1980)
Context: I am inclined to doubt that anything very resembling formal logic could be a good model for human reasoning. In particular, I doubt that any logic that prohibits self-reference can be adequate for psychology: no mind can have enough power — without the power to think about Thinking itself. Without Self-Reference it would seem immeasurably harder to achieve Self-Consciousness — which, so far as I can see, requires at least some capacity to reflect on what it does. If Russell shattered our hopes for making a completely reliable version of commonsense reasoning, still we can try to find the islands of "local consistency," in which naive reasoning remains correct.

“The best of the diviner breed are never wrong because they never set anything in stone.”
Source: She Is the Darkness (1997), Chapter 79 (p. 555)

Source: kniha Michelle Obama - Becoming

Extreme Championship Wrestling. April 17th, 2007.
Extreme Championship Wrestling