Maimónides book The Guide for the Perplexed
Source: Guide for the Perplexed (c. 1190), Part III, Ch.25
Source: Guide for the Perplexed (c. 1190), Part III, Ch.25
Maimónides book The Guide for the Perplexed
Source: Guide for the Perplexed (c. 1190), Part III, Ch.25
William James (1842–1910) American philosopher, psychologist, and pragmatist
1880s, The Sentiment of Rationality (1882)
Context: The necessity of faith as an ingredient in our mental attitude is strongly insisted on by the scientific philosophers of the present day; but by a singularly arbitrary caprice they say that it is only legitimate when used in the interests of one particular proposition, — the proposition, namely, that the course of nature is uniform. That nature will follow to-morrow the same laws that she follows to-day is, they all admit, a truth which no man can know; but in the interests of cognition as well as of action we must postulate or assume it.
Jacques Barzun (1907–2012) Historian
Source: Bernard Shaw in Twilight (1943), IV
Context: He never invested his whole moral capital in a man, a book, or a cause, but treasured up wisdom wherever it could be picked up, always with scrupulous acknowledgment … His eclecticism saving him from the cycle of hope-disillusion-despair, his highest effectiveness was as a skirmisher in the daily battle for light and justice, as a critic of new doctrine and a refurbisher of old, as a voice of warning and encouragement. That his action has not been in vain, we can measure by how little Shaw's iconoclasm stirs our blood; we no longer remember what he destroyed that was blocking our view.
Karl Barth (1886–1968) Swiss Protestant theologian
The Knowledge of God and the Service of God (1939), p. 31
Richard Dawkins (1941) English ethologist, evolutionary biologist and author
An Interview by Sheena McDonald (1995)
John Calvin book Institutes of the Christian Religion
Book 1, Chapter 3, p. 52
Institutes of the Christian Religion (1536; 1559)
“What place can be left for random action, when God constraineth all things to order?”
Quis enim cohercente in ordinem cuncta deo locus esse ullus temeritati reliquus potest?
Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius (480) philosopher of the early 6th century
Prose I; translation by H. R. James
The Consolation of Philosophy · De Consolatione Philosophiae, Book V
Olaf Stapledon book Sirius
Sirius (1944)