
“Briefly, you can only find truth with logic if you have already found truth without it.”
Daily News (25 February 1905)
Part Third: The Lighthouse, Ch. 11
Nostromo (1904)
“Briefly, you can only find truth with logic if you have already found truth without it.”
Daily News (25 February 1905)
“Peace, freedom and justice are only to be found where people are prepared to defend them.”
Speech to the Conservative Party Convention 1982 https://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/105032
First term as Prime Minister
“Justice without force is powerless; force without justice is tyrannical.”
“if we have not found the heaven within, we have not found the heaven without”
Source: Lost Horizon
Source: [Gibbons, H. A., Venizelos, Modern Statesmen Series, Houghton Mifflin Company, 1920, http://books.google.com/books?id=DVMlZtkx5bwC], p. 17
Source: The Production of Security (1849), p. 51
1950s, Second Inaugural Address (1957)
Context: We look upon this shaken Earth, and we declare our firm and fixed purpose — the building of a peace with justice in a world where moral law prevails. The building of such a peace is a bold and solemn purpose. To proclaim it is easy. To serve it will be hard. And to attain it, we must be aware of its full meaning — and ready to pay its full price. We know clearly what we seek, and why. We seek peace, knowing that peace is the climate of freedom. And now, as in no other age, we seek it because we have been warned, by the power of modern weapons, that peace may be the only climate possible for human life itself. Yet this peace we seek cannot be born of fear alone: it must be rooted in the lives of nations. There must be justice, sensed and shared by all peoples, for, without justice the world can know only a tense and unstable truce. There must be law, steadily invoked and respected by all nations, for without law, the world promises only such meager justice as the pity of the strong upon the weak. But the law of which we speak, comprehending the values of freedom, affirms the equality of all nations, great and small. Splendid as can be the blessings of such a peace, high will be its cost: in toil patiently sustained, in help honorably given, in sacrifice calmly borne.
“For in politics, what can laws do without morals? ”
1900s, The Strenuous Life: Essays and Addresses (1900), National Duties