1920s, The Aims of Education (1929)
“Undershaft: You have made for yourself something that you call a morality or a religion or what not. It doesn't fit the facts. Well, scrap it. Scrap it and get one that does fit. That is what is wrong with the world at present. It scraps its obsolete steam engines and dynamos; but it wont scrap its old prejudices and its old moralities and its old religions and its old political constitutions. Whats the result? In machinery it does very well; but in morals and religion and politics it is working at a loss that brings it nearer bankruptcy every year.”
1900s, Major Barbara (1905)
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George Bernard Shaw 413
Irish playwright 1856–1950Related quotes
Source: 1960s, Jours effeuillés: Poèmes, essaies, souvenirs (1966), p. 63
Context: Dada was given the Venus of Milo a clyster and has allowed the Laocoön and his sons to rest awhile, after thousands of years of struggle with the good sausage Python. The philosophers are of less use to Dada than an old toothbrush, and it leaves them on the scrap heap for the great leaders of the world.
“Picking through your pocket lining, well what is this?
Scrap of sassafras, eh Sisyphus?”
Ys (2006)
“The test of the morality of a society is what it does for its children.”
Variant: The ultimate test of a moral society is the kind of world that it leaves to its children.
Source: The Confessions of Aleister Crowley: An Autohagiography
Section 2 : Religion
Founding Address (1876), Life and Destiny (1913)
1920s, Science and the Modern World (1925)
Source: Law and Authority (1886), I
The Tragic Sense of Life (1913), IV : The Essence of Catholicism