À mes yeux, c’est seulement l’ascèse de la rigueur scientifique, ce détachement de soi qu’exige un jugement objectif et impartial, qui pourra nous donner le droit de nous impliquer nous-mêmes dans l’histoire, de lui donner un sens existentiel.
Preface to Nietzsche : Essai de mythologie (1990) by E. Bertram, p. 34
“The History of Institutions cannot be mastered – can scarcely be approached – without an effort. It affords little of the romantic incident or of the picturesque grouping which constitute the charm of History in general, and holds out small temptation to the mind that requires to be tempted to the study of Truth. But it…abounds in examples of that continuity of life, the realisation of which is necessary to give the reader a personal hold on the past and a right judgment of the present. For the roots of the present lie deep in the past, and nothing in the past is dead to the man who would learn how the present comes to be what it is.”
The Constitutional History of England (1873-8; Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1903) vol. 1, p. iii.
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William Stubbs 4
English historian and clergyman 1825–1901Related quotes
Patrick J. Geary, The Myth of Nations: The Medieval Origins of Europe, Princeton University Press, 2003
Concurring, Glossip v. Gross, 576 U.S. ___ (2015).
2010s
Source: Summa Contra Gentiles
“A study of the history of opinion is a necessary preliminary to the emancipation of the mind.”
Source: Essays in Persuasion (1931), The End of Laissez-faire (1926), Ch. 1
Source: Understanding Capitalism: Competition, Command, and Change, 2005, p. 57
Source: Barbarian Sentiments - How The American Century Ends (1989), Chapter 1, Dead Stars, p. 3.
“A generation which ignores history has no past —and no future.”
Source: Time Enough for Love (1973)