
Young India 1924-1926 (1927), p. 1285
1920s
The Tragic Sense of Life (1913), V : The Rationalist Dissolution
Young India 1924-1926 (1927), p. 1285
1920s
“If I convert it's because it's better that a believer dies than that an atheist does.”
Source: 2010s, 2011, Mortality (2012), p. 91.
The Deliverance from Error https://www.amazon.com/Al-Ghazalis-Path-Sufism-Deliverance-al-Munqidh/dp/1887752307
“Resistance through violence and killing is wrong and does not succeed.”
2009, A New Beginning (June 2009)
Context: Resistance through violence and killing is wrong and does not succeed. For centuries, black people in America suffered the lash of the whip as slaves and the humiliation of segregation. But it was not violence that won full and equal rights. It was a peaceful and determined insistence upon the ideals at the centre of America's founding. This same story can be told by people from South Africa to South Asia; from Eastern Europe to Indonesia. It's a story with a simple truth: violence is a dead end. It is a sign of neither courage nor power to shoot rockets at sleeping children, or to blow up old women on a bus. That is not how moral authority is claimed; that is how it is surrendered.
Source: The Moral Judgment of the Child (1932), Ch. 2 : Adult Constraint and Moral Realism <!-- p. 93 -->
Context: Generally speaking, one can say that motor intelligence contains the germs of completed reason. But it gives promise of more than reason pure and simple. From the moral as from the intellectual point of view, the child is born neither good nor bad, but master of his destiny. Now, if there is intelligence in the schemas of motor adaptation, there is also the element of play. The intentionality peculiar to motor activity is not a search for truth but the pursuit of a result, whether objective or subjective; and to succeed is not to discover a truth.
“A line of reasoning does not lead but follows us to truth.”
Why I Am a Muslim: And a Christian and a Jew (2020)
“No man can succeed in a line of endeavor which he does not like.”
“It does not matter how frequently something succeeds if failure is too costly to bear.”
Fooled by Randomness (2001)