“How shall the murdered man convince his assassin he will not haunt him.”
Source: Under the Volcano (1947), Ch. III (p. 79)
Part III : Selection on Education from Kant's other Writings, Ch. I Pedagogical Fragments, # 53
The Educational Theory of Immanuel Kant (1904)
“How shall the murdered man convince his assassin he will not haunt him.”
Source: Under the Volcano (1947), Ch. III (p. 79)
Source: 1860s, Evidence as to Man's Place in Nature (1863), Ch.2, p. 86
“To place man properly at the present time, he stands somewhere between the angels and the French.”
Source: Human Nature and the Social Order, 1902, p. 111
Notes, p. 262.
The Lost World of Thomas Jefferson (1948)
Explaining Jim Crow laws to his daughters, in The Luminous Darkness : A Personal Interpretation of the Anatomy of Segregation and the Ground of Hope (1989), p. 71
Source: Guide for the Perplexed (c. 1190), Part III, Ch.24
Context: This is the way how we have to understand the accounts of trials; we must not think that God desires to examine us and to try us in order to know what He did not know before. Far is this from Him; He is far above that which ignorant and foolish people imagine concerning Him, in the evil of their thoughts. Note this.