
“[T]he remedy of force can never supply the remedy of reason.”
Part 1.3 Rights of Man
1790s, Rights of Man, Part I (1791)
Speech in Birmingham (November 1880) referring to the Irish question, quoted in G. M. Trevelyan, The Life of John Bright (London: Constable, 1913), p. 429.
1880s
“[T]he remedy of force can never supply the remedy of reason.”
Part 1.3 Rights of Man
1790s, Rights of Man, Part I (1791)
Letter to George Washington (November 1779)
Speech in the House of Commons on the Irish insurgency after the Great War, quoted in Lord Birkenhead, Halifax (Hamish Hamilton, 1965), pp. 121-122
Backbench MP
Discussion with Ela Bhatt, Founder, Self-Employed Women's Association (SEWA)
Individual Liberty (1926), Passive Resistance
Context: When a physician sees that his patient's strength is being exhausted so rapidly by the intensity of his agony that he will die of exhaustion before the medical processes inaugurated have a chance to do their curative work, he administers an opiate. But a good physician is always loath to do so, knowing that one of the influences of the opiate is to interfere with and defeat the medical processes themselves. He never does it except as a choice of evils. It is the same with the use of force, whether of the mob or of the State, upon diseased society; and not only those who prescribe its indiscriminate use as a sovereign remedy and a permanent tonic, but all who ever propose it as a cure, and even all who would lightly and unnecessarily resort to it, not as a cure, but as an expedient, are social quacks.
“Force overcome by force.”
Vi victa vis.
Pro Milone, Chapter XI, section 30
Variant translation: Violence conquered by violence.
“That force is to be opposed to nothing, but to unjust and unlawful force.”
Second Treatise of Government, Ch. XVIII, sec. 204
Two Treatises of Government (1689)
Context: To this I answer: That force is to be opposed to nothing, but to unjust and unlawful force. Whoever makes any opposition in any other case, draws on himself a just condemnation, both from God and man…
“Hate is not a creative force. Love is a creative force.”
Sourced Quotes
Source: Saint Maximilian Kolbe - Knight of the Immaculate, The Society of the Holy Rosary.