Friday, November 22, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Jean-Baptiste Say

« All quotes from this author
 

Taxation being a burthen, must needs weigh lightest on each individual, when it bears upon all alike.
--
Book III, On Consumption, Chapter VIII, Section I, p. 454

 
Jean-Baptiste Say

» Jean-Baptiste Say - all quotes »



Tags: Jean-Baptiste Say Quotes, Authors starting by S


Similar quotes

 

I define anarchist society as one where there is no legal possibility for coercive aggression against the person or property of any individual. Anarchists oppose the State because it has its very being in such aggression, namely, the expropriation of private property through taxation, the coercive exclusion of other providers of defense service from its territory, and all of the other depredations and coercions that are built upon these twin foci of invasions of individual rights.

 
Murray Rothbard
 

Sacred thy laughter on the air,
Holy thy lightest word that fell,
Proud the innumerable hair
That waved at the enchanter's spell.
Oh Master of the Beautiful,
Creating us from hour to hour,
Give me this vision to the full
To see in lightest things thy power!
This vision give, no heaven afar,
No throne, and yet I will rejoice,
Knowing beneath my feet a star,
Thy word in every wandering voice.

 
George William Russell
 

Variability is the law of life, and as no two faces are the same, so no two bodies are alike, and no two individuals react alike and behave alike under the abnormal conditions which we know as disease.

 
William Osler
 

Genius is essentially creative; it bears the stamp of the individual who possesses it.

 
Anne Louise Germaine de Stael
 

But this I thought was the meaning of life, that the individual shook off the habit of accepting the favors of difference, should that be tempting, steeled himself against its humiliation, should that weigh down on him, in order to find the universal, what is common to all human beings, to concern oneself only with that. Oh! How beautiful to lose oneself in this way. But then I thought again that in the having of this concern the meaning of life was to be concerned for oneself as if the particular individual were all there was. Oh! How beautiful thus to find oneself in the universal! If the universal is the rule then the individual is the paradigm [corrected from demand]; if the universal is the demand then the universal is the fulfillment; if the universal is everything, if the universal says everything, then the particular individual believes that the everything is said about him-him alone. So if the place and context here did not require signature, none would be needed, for again it is infinitely inconsequential who has said it (as though the favored one said it, the one who was wronged being in no position to say it, since after all they all have it in them to do it).

 
Soren Aabye Kierkegaard
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact