Thursday, November 21, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Edward Abbey

« All quotes from this author
 

There is no force more potent in the modern world than stupidity fueled by greed.
--
Ch. 11 : Money Et Cetera, p. 100

 
Edward Abbey

» Edward Abbey - all quotes »



Tags: Edward Abbey Quotes, Authors starting by A


Similar quotes

 

In a world of lunacy
Violence, stupidity, greed…it is a good life.

 
Thomas Stearns (T. S.) Eliot
 

One reason for the primacy of the market in shaping the modern world is that it forces a reorganization of society in order to make the market work properly . When a market comes into existence, as Marx fully appreciated, it becomes a potent force driving social change.

 
Robert Gilpin
 

Jessica Mae Stover is a force of nature. She is something like a hurricane or a tornado; she is an unstoppable force fueled by her passion and her vision and her belief. She is a revolutionary.

 
Jessica Mae Stover
 

According to Aristotle then excellence of character and intelligence cannot be separated. Here Aristotle expresses a view characteristically at odds with that dominant in the modern world. The modern view is expressed at one level in such banalities as ‘Be good, sweet maid, and let who will be clever’ and at another in such profundities as Kant’s distinction between the good will, the possession of which alone is both necessary and sufficient for moral worth, and what he took to be a quite distinct natural gift, that of knowing how to apply general rules to particular cases, a gift the lack of which is called stupidity. So for Kant one can be both good and stupid; but for Aristotle stupidity of a certain kind precludes goodness.

 
Alasdair MacIntyre
 

Pythagoras stands at the fountainhead of our culture. The ideas he set in motion were, according to Daniel Boorstin, "among the most potent in modern history," resulting directly in many of the pillars upon which the modern world is built. In particular, the very existence of science becomes possible only when it is realized that inner, purely subjective, mathematical forms have a resonance with the form and behavior of the external world — a Pythagorean perception. And a world at peace — that is to say, in a nuclear age, the survival of our planet — is predicated upon ideas of universal brotherhood to which Pythagoras, while not the sole author, made an enormous contribution. Even the seeming remoteness of Pythagorean teaching helps one to realize that the current world view, while it seems destined to dominate the planet, is fleeting and temporary and, like others before it, will pass.

 
Pythagoras
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact