Friday, March 29, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Thomas Babington Macaulay

« All quotes from this author
 

It seems that the creative faculty and the critical faculty cannot exist together in their highest perfection.

 
Thomas Babington Macaulay

» Thomas Babington Macaulay - all quotes »



Tags: Thomas Babington Macaulay Quotes, Authors starting by M


Similar quotes

 

Nature, not content with denying to Mr — the faculty of thought, has endowed him with the faculty of writing.

 
A. E. Housman
 

The imagination eulogized by Baudelaire is in his own case more often than not a synonym for desire or despair. His critical exigencies are, like those of the profoundly sick man that he was, harsh and imperative and illusory in the sense of release temporarily obtained. Yet imagination is also the faculty that gives Baudelaire a royal sense of equality with other creative artists; he uses his status as a poet to boost his activities as a critic, claiming, with total justification in his case, that criticism is a creative affair, a fine rather than applied art.

 
Charles Baudelaire
 

FACULTY PSYCHOLOGY is getting to be respectable again after centuries of hanging around with phrenologists and other dubious types. By faculty psychology I mean, roughly , the view that many fundamentally different kinds of psychological mechanisms must be postulated in order to explain the facts of mental life . Faculty psychology takes seriously the apparent heterogeneity of the mental and is impressed by such prima facie differences as between, say, sensation and perception, volition and cognition, learning and remembering, or language and thought.

 
Jerry Fodor
 

Encourage therefore his inquisitiveness all you can, by satisfying his demands, and informing his judgement, as far as it is capable. When his reasons are any way tolerable, let him find the credit and commendation of it, without being laugh'd at for his mistake be gently put into the right; and if he shew a forwardness to be reasoning about things that come in his way, take care, as much as you can, that no body check this inclination in him, or mislead it by captious or fallacious ways of talking with him. For when all is done, this is the highest and most important faculty of our minds, deserves the greatest care and attention in cultivating it: the right improvement, and exercise of our reason being the highest perfection that a man can attain to in his life.

 
John Locke
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact