Sunday, November 24, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Charles Dodgson (Lewis Carroll)

« All quotes from this author
 

Such were the lucidity of exposition and his mastery of the topic that it seems possible that, had he ever published it, the political theory of Britain would have been significantly different.
--
Michael Dummett on Carroll's work on election theory; quoted in Robin Wilson, Lewis Carroll in Numberland (2008) p.vii

 
Charles Dodgson (Lewis Carroll)

» Charles Dodgson (Lewis Carroll) - all quotes »



Tags: Charles Dodgson (Lewis Carroll) Quotes, Authors starting by D


Similar quotes

 

Jürgen Habermas currently ranks as one of the most influential philosophers in the world. Bridging continental and Anglo-American traditions of thought, he has engaged in debates with thinkers as diverse as Gadamer and Putnam, Foucault and Rawls, Derrida and Brandom. His extensive written work addresses topics stretching from social-political theory to aesthetics, epistemology and language to philosophy of religion, and his ideas have significantly influenced not only philosophy but also political-legal thought, sociology, communication studies, argumentation theory and rhetoric, developmental psychology and theology. Moreover, he has figured prominently in Germany as a public intellectual, commenting on controversial issues of the day in German newspapers such as Die Zeit.

 
Jurgen Habermasā€ˇ
 

Lucidity does not extirpate the desire to live - far from it, lucidity merely makes us unsuited to life.

 
Emil Cioran
 

He wrote consistently but almost never published through traditional means. There is nothing more detrimental to art, he maintained, than succumbing to “how the public thinks and what it likes and what it will buy.” ... Whether Cavafy is describing an ancient political intrigue or an erotic encounter that occurred last week, his topic is the passage of time. ... Earlier translators have, to varying degrees, rightly emphasized the prosaic flatness of Cavafy’s language; the flatness is crucial to the emotional power of the poems, since it prevents their irony from seeming caustic, their longing from seeming nostalgic.

 
Constantine P. Cavafy
 

The general point that a political theory is, among other things, a partisan intervention, is well taken. So question about the actual political implication of a theory cannot be excluded as, in principle, irrelevant.

 
Raymond Geuss
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact