
“There are mobile objects and stationary objects, but there is neither motion nor staticness.”
Al-Fassl Fil Milal, vol 5, pp. 55.
Source: 2010s, Fateful Lightning: A New History of the Civil War and Reconstruction (2012), Chapter One
“There are mobile objects and stationary objects, but there is neither motion nor staticness.”
Al-Fassl Fil Milal, vol 5, pp. 55.
The Economy of New Democracy
On New Democracy (1940)
“And finds, with keen, discriminating sight,
Black ’s not so black,—nor white so very white.”
New Morality.
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919)
Henry J. Heinz, cited in: John Woolf Jordan (1915). Genealogical and Personal History of Western Pennsylvania. p. 38
“America's health care system is neither healthy, caring, nor a system.”
Source: Free the Airwaves! (2002)
I, p. 448
1810s, Letters to John Taylor (1814)
Context: Liberty, according to my metaphysics, is an intellectual quality; an attribute that belongs not to fate nor chance. Neither possesses it, neither is capable of it. There is nothing moral or immoral in the idea of it. The definition of it is a self-determining power in an intellectual agent. It implies thought and choice and power; it can elect between objects, indifferent in point of morality, neither morally good nor morally evil. If the substance in which this quality, attribute, adjective, call it what you will, exists, has a moral sense, a conscience, a moral faculty; if it can distinguish between moral good and moral evil, and has power to choose the former and refuse the latter, it can, if it will, choose the evil and reject the good, as we see in experience it very often does.
“Man was formed for society and is neither capable of living alone, nor has the courage to do it.”
Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765–1769)
Source: Introduction, Section II: Of the Nature of Laws in General
Illinois College Valedictory (1881)