“All thinking men are atheists.”
Ernest Hemingway book A Farewell to Arms
Source: A Farewell to Arms (1929), Ch. 2
MURRAY v. CURLETT, Petition for Relief, 1959
“All thinking men are atheists.”
Ernest Hemingway book A Farewell to Arms
Source: A Farewell to Arms (1929), Ch. 2
“(Still an atheist at the time) For Heaven's sake…sorry, perhaps I should have said something else.”
Antony Flew (1923–2010) British analytic and evidentialist philosopher
Craig Vs Flew, University of Wisconsin, 1st January 1998 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NixhL0CoH2s
Cassandra Clare The Mortal Instruments
Jace and Simon, pg. 171
The Mortal Instruments, City of Ashes (2008)
“I have heard an atheist defined as a man who had no invisible means of support.”
John Buchan (1875–1940) British politician
A play on words commonly used referring to vagrants or paupers as having "no visible means of support" financially, speaking to the Law Society of Upper Canada, (21 February 1936); published in Canadian Occasions (1940), p. 201. Buchan's source for this definition remains unknown. The witticism was repeated by Harry Emerson Fosdick in his On Being a Real Person (1943), ch. 1, with due acknowledgement to Buchan, and was again used by Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen in Look magazine (December 14, 1955). The credit for this line is therefore often wrongly given to Fosdick or to Sheen. Credit has also been given to the conductor Walter Damrosch (1862-1950).
Canadian Occasions (1940)
Abraham Lincoln (1809–1865) 16th President of the United States
Recollection by Gilbert J. Greene, quoted in The Speaking Oak (1902) by Ferdinand C. Iglehart and Latest Light on Abraham Lincoln (1917) by Ervin S. Chapman
Posthumous attributions
“All children are born Atheists; they have no idea of God.”
Baron d'Holbach (1723–1789) French-German author, philosopher, encyclopedist
ibid., chap. 30