Dean Inge [1860-1954] English Rank: 102 Author
Faith, Fear, Trust, Wisdom
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| What is originality? Undetected plagiarism. | | 101| The wisdom of the wise is an uncommon degree of common sense. | Wisdom | 102| The soul is dyed with the color of its leisure thoughts. | | 103| I have no fear that the candle lighted in Palestine years ago will ever be put out. | Fear | 104| We tolerate shapes in human beings that would horrify us if we saw them in a horse. | | 105| Democracy is only an experiment in government, and it has the obvious disadvantage of merely counting votes instead of weighing them. | | 106| Bereavement is the sharpest challenge to our trust in God; if faith can overcome this, there is no mountain which it cannot remove. | Faith, Trust | 107| Bereavement is the deepest initiation into the mysteries of human life, an initiation more searching and profound than even happy love. | | 108| Don't get up from the feast of life without paying for your share of it. | | 109| Let none of us delude himself by supposing that honesty is always the best policy. It is not. | | 110| A good government remains the greatest of human blessings and no nation has ever enjoyed it. | | 111| Gambling is a disease of barbarians superficially civilized. | | 112| A cat can be trusted to purr when she is pleased, which is more than can be said for human beings. | | 113| It takes in reality only one to make a quarrel. It is useless for the sheep to pass resolutions in favor of vegetarianism, while the wolf remains of a different opinion. | | 114| The wise man is he who knows the relative value of things. | | 115| Love remembered and consecrated by grief belongs, more clearly than the happy intercourse of friends, to the eternal world; it has proved itself stronger than death. | | 116| In praising science, it does not follow that we must adopt the very poor philosophies which scientific men have constructed. In philosophy they have much more to learn than to teach. | | 117| The object of studying philosophy is to know one's own mind, not other people's. | | 118| Faith always contains an element of risk, of venture; and we are impelled to make the venture by the affinity and attraction which we feel in ourselves. | | 119| All faith consists essentially in the recognition of a world of spiritual values behind, yet not apart from, the world of natural phenomena. | | 120| Action is the normal completion of the act of will which begins as prayer. That action is not always external, but it is always some kind of effective energy. | | 121| Faith is an act of rational choice, which determines us to act as if certain things were true, and in the confident expectation that they will prove to be true. | | 122| If the universe is running down like a clock, the clock must have been wound up at a date which we could name if we knew it. The world, if it is to have an end in time, must have had a beginning in time. | | 123| To marry is to get a binocular view of life. | | 124| The proper time to influence the character of a child is about a hundred years before he is born. | | 125| It was said that Mr. Gladstone could persuade most people of most things, and himself of anything. | | 126| Man, as we know him, is a poor creature; he is halfway between an ape and a god and he is travelling in the right direction. | | 201 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
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