Patheos, How is secular humanist governance better than theocracy? http://www.patheos.com/blogs/reasonadvocates/2013/09/07/how-is-secular-humanist-governance-better-than-theocracy/ (September 7, 2013)
“It seems that religion only knows how to react violently, out of vengeance. Again this is because it’s a belief system rooted in dichotomy and bigotry, with little or no desire to consider extenuating circumstances and NO ability to question itself objectively.”
Patheos, How is secular humanist governance better than theocracy? http://www.patheos.com/blogs/reasonadvocates/2013/09/07/how-is-secular-humanist-governance-better-than-theocracy/ (September 7, 2013)
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Aron Ra 190
Aron Ra is an atheist activist and the host of the Ra-Men P… 1962Related quotes
                                        
                                        ( wav audio file of Russell's voice http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/russell/desire.wav) 
1950s, What Desires Are Politically Important? (1950) 
Context: All human activity is prompted by desire. There is a wholly fallacious theory advanced by some earnest moralists to the effect that it is possible to resist desire in the interests of duty and moral principle. I say this is fallacious, not because no man ever acts from a sense of duty, but because duty has no hold on him unless he desires to be dutiful. If you wish to know what men will do, you must know not only, or principally, their material circumstances, but rather the whole system of their desires with their relative strengths.
                                    
                                        
                                        Variants (these could be paraphrases or differing translations): The belief that there is only one truth and that oneself is in possession of it seems to me the deepest root of all evil that is in the world.
The belief that there is only one truth, and that oneself is in possession of it, is the root of all evil in the world. 
Source: Natural Philosophy of Cause and Chance (1964), p. 230, also in My Life and Views (1968), p. 183
                                    
                                        
                                        Book 1, Chapter 6 “A Haven of Civilization” (p. 214) 
Oswald Bastable, The Land Leviathan (1974)
                                    
Studies in a Dying Culture (1938), Pacifism and Violence: A Study in Bourgeois Ethics
                                        
                                        John D. Barrow, Between Inner and Outer Space: Essays on Science, Art and Philosophy (Oxford University Press, 2000, ISBN 0-192-88041-1, Part 4, ch. 13: Why is the Universe Mathematical? (p. 88). Also found in Barrow's  "The Mathematical Universe" http://www.lasalle.edu/~didio/courses/hon462/hon462_assets/mathematical_universe.htm (1989) and The Artful Universe Expanded (Oxford University Press, 2005, ISBN 0-192-80569-X, ch. 5, Player Piano: Hearing by Numbers, p. 250 
Misattributed
                                    
                                        
                                        The Artful Universe (1995) 
Context: If a 'religion' is defined to be a system of ideas that contains unprovable statements, then Gödel taught us that mathematics is not only a religion, it is the only religion that can prove itself to be one.<!-- Ch. 5, p. 211
                                    
undated quotes, The Daily Practice of Painting, Writings (1962-1993)