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| Link | Quote | Stars | Tags | Author |
| b1a7264 | Linus Pauling famously said, "If you want a good idea, start with a lot of ideas." | Tom Kelley | ||
| 3a9738a | At Linus Pauling's sixtieth birthday celebration, a student asked him, "Dr. Pauling, how does one go about having good ideas?" He replied, "You have a lot of ideas and throw away the bad ones." | Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi | ||
| dd286fa | Never lose heart while pursuing the path of trust. Live a principled life. | Basava | ||
| 4b212f7 | I love baseball. You know, it doesn't have to mean anything. It's just very beautiful to watch. | Baseball | ||
| b242a5b | Drudgery means doing an ungrateful task for an ungrateful person - and anyone employed at the bottom of the labour market knows what that means. The | Roger Scruton | ||
| ad54963 | Baseball can be summed up in one word -- youneverknow. | Baseball | ||
| 66db359 | Isn't this a silly game? People throw balls and people swing bats. | Baseball | ||
| 9ae87ee | Liberals saw political order as issuing from individual liberty; conservatives saw individual liberty as issuing from political order. What makes a political order legitimate, in the conservative view, is not the free choices that create it, but the free choices that it creates. | Roger Scruton | ||
| 300c726 | It is one mark of rational beings that they do not live only - or even at all - in the present. They have the freedom to despise the world that surrounds them and to live in another way. | Roger Scruton | ||
| 5baaee6 | The worst mistake in politics is the mistake made by Lenin - the mistake of destroying the institutions and procedures whereby mistakes can be recognized. Something | Roger Scruton | ||
| 6ead2a8 | Human beings, in their settled condition, are animated by oikophilia: the love of the oikos, which means not only the home but the people contained in it, and the surrounding settlements that endow that home with lasting contours and an enduring smile.4 The oikos is the place that is not just mine and yours but ours. It is the stage-set for the first-person plural of politics, the locus, both real and imagined, where 'it all takes place'. V.. | Roger Scruton | ||
| 4140be6 | The Arts Council exists to subsidise those artists, writers and musicians whose work is important. But how do bureaucrats decide that something is important? The culture tells them that a work is important if it is original, and the proof that a work is original is that the public doesn't like it. Besides, if the public did like it, why would it need a subsidy? Official patronage therefore inevitably favours works that are arcane, excruciat.. | Roger Scruton | ||
| 35f9b13 | Now it seems to me that there are bad ways of loving a horse: ways that are bad for the horse, and also bad for the one who loves him. A love that regards the horse as a play-thing, whose purpose is to satisfy the whims of a rider, to be an object of cuddling and caressing of a kind that the horse himself can neither reciprocate nor understand - such a love is a way of disregarding the horse. It is also in its own way corrupt. A person who .. | Roger Scruton | ||
| 4b3be9f | For the conservative, human beings come into this world burdened by obligations, and subject to institutions and traditions that contain within them a precious inheritance of wisdom, without which the exercise of freedom is as likely to destroy human rights and entitlements as to enhance them. | Roger Scruton | ||
| 570a397 | Sexual desire, as it has been understood in every epoch prior to the present, is inherently compromising, and the choice to express it or to yield to it has been viewed as an existential choice, in which more is at risk than present satisfaction. Not surprisingly, therefore, the sexual act has been surrounded by prohibitions; it brings with it a weight of shame, guilt, and jealousy, as well as joy and happiness. Sex is therefore deeply impl.. | Roger Scruton | ||
| de9e9fb | When the Communist Party took over Eastern Europe, its first work was to destroy the civil associations that it did not control. | Roger Scruton | ||
| 943a1ca | There is a tendency among environmentalists to single out the big players in the market as the principal culprits: to pin environmental crime on those - like oil companies, motor manufacturers, logging corporations, agribusinesses, supermarkets - that make their profits by exporting their costs to others (including others who are not yet born). But this is to mistake the effect for the cause. In a free economy such ways of making money emer.. | Roger Scruton | ||
| 1e00f5e | Burke rejected the liberal idea of the social contract, as a deal agreed among living people. Society, he argued, does not contain the living only; it is an association between the dead, the living and the unborn. Its binding principle is not contract but something more akin to trusteeship. It is a shared inheritance for the sake of which we learn to circumscribe our demands, to see our own place in things as part of a continuous chain of g.. | Roger Scruton | ||
| cd20538 | Little Platoons' are the places where traditions form. Social traditions, Burke pointed out, are forms of knowledge. They contain the residues of many trials and errors, and the inherited solutions to problems that we all encounter. Like those cognitive abilities that pre-date civilisation they are adaptations, but adaptations of the community rather than of the individual organism. Social traditions exist because they enable a society to r.. | Roger Scruton | ||
| cb8a061 | Moreover, in discussing tradition, we are not discussing arbitrary rules and conventions. We are discussing answers that have been discovered to enduring questions. These answers are tacit, shared, embodied in social practices and inarticulate expectations. Those who adopt them are not necessarily able to explain them, still less to justify them. Hence Burke described them as 'prejudices,' and defended them on the grounds that, though the s.. | Roger Scruton | ||
| f3b7303 | Looks are voluntary. But the full revelation of the subject in the face is not, as a rule, voluntary. Smiles are usually involuntary, and "gift smiles," as one might call them, always so. Likewise laughter, to be genuine, must be involuntary--even though laughter is something of which only creatures with intentions, reason, and self-consciousness are capable. The important point is that, while smiling and laughing are movements of the mouth.. | Roger Scruton | ||
| c2954a6 | The assault on the human world in the name of science is more pseudo-science than science, and rejoices in its bald, unmoralised image of 'what we really are'. What we really are from the scientific point of view is precisely what we really aren't. | Roger Scruton | ||
| 3427e0c | Then there are the fully intentional pleasures, which, although in some way tied up with sensory or perceptual experience, are modes of exploration of the world. Aesthetic pleasures are like this. Aesthetic pleasures are contemplative - they involve studying an object OUTSIDE of the self, to which one is GIVING something (namely, attention and all that flows from it), and not TAKING, as in the pleasure that comes from drugs and drinks. Henc.. | beauty contemplation pleasure study | Roger Scruton | |
| 770243a | We can envisage society as founded in a contract only if we see its members as capable of the free and responsible choice that a contract requires. But only in certain circumstances will human beings develop into rational choosers, capable of undertaking obligations and honouring promises, and oriented towards one another in a posture of responsibility. In the course of acquiring this posture towards others, people acquire obligations of qu.. | Roger Scruton | ||
| 3585305 | In that room was a battered remnant of Prague's intelligentsia - old professors in their shabby waistcoats; long-haired poets; fresh-faced students who had been denied admission to university for their parents' political 'crimes'; priests and religious in plain clothes; novelists and theologians; a would-be rabbi; and even a psychoanalyst. And in all of them I saw the same marks of suffering, tempered by hope; and the same eager desire for .. | Roger Scruton | ||
| 39112a5 | Those who imagined, in 1989, that never again would an intellectual be caught defending the Leninist Party, or advocating the methods of Josef Stalin, had reckoned without the overwhelming power of nonsense. In the urgent need to believe, to find a central mystery that is the true meaning of things and to which one's life can be dedicated, nonsense is much to be preferred to sense. For it builds a way of life around something that cannot be.. | marxism | Roger Scruton | |
| 649f5f7 | Opportunities are enhanced not by closing things down, but by opening things up. It is by allowing autonomous institutions to grow, by protecting the space in which they flourish, and | Roger Scruton | ||
| 590fb14 | Gradually this truth is beginning to dawn on the political class, so that even socialists have come to accept that the poor are not helped by taking revenge against the rich, but by opening the doors to social advancement. Since | Roger Scruton | ||
| 7a8ac27 | When I put my trust in a critic, this is tantamount to saying that I defer to his judgement, even when I have made no judgement of my own. But my own judgement waits upon experience. It is only when I have heard the piece in question, in the moment of appreciation, that my borrowed opinion can actually become a judgement of mine. | Roger Scruton | ||
| cc759db | all the respects that I have so far mentioned, conversation fits the bill of a free association which is subservient to no purpose but itself, and which is destroyed by the bossiness and urgencies of the planner, the utopian and the rationalist. On the other hand, conversations have to be among few participants if they are to dispense with some kind of central discipline or with accepted procedures and conventions. As | Roger Scruton | ||
| d717f11 | So conceived, the English police force served to emphasize a fundamental truth about the English law, which is that it exists not to control the individual but to free him. The | Roger Scruton | ||
| 2e74e62 | the growing materialism of our societies. This materialism informs political discourse at every level, making wealth and its distribution the only issue that is discussed for long. As a result, people think of conservatism merely as a form of complacency towards the current system of material rewards, which has nothing whatever to say about the things that 'money can't buy', or about the effect of the consumer society on our deeper values. .. | Roger Scruton | ||
| e0bbdd1 | Subsequent revolutions have in like manner regarded the Church as Public Enemy number 1, precisely because it creates a realm of value and authority outside the reach of the state. It | Roger Scruton | ||
| e025282 | Political order, in short, requires cultural unity, something that politics itself can never provide. | Roger Scruton | ||
| d123b70 | Hence, by a series of almost unnoticed changes, allowing ever easier divorce, and ever more blatant neglect of children, the state has overseen the gradual undoing of the marriage vow, to | Roger Scruton | ||
| 6c876a1 | In general we should be aware of, and protective towards, those precious legal instruments that we already possess, and which often depend on principles of equity and natural law and not on top-down legislation. | Roger Scruton | ||
| cc9f02f | Without a criterion enabling us to distinguish genuine human rights from the many impostors we will never be sure that our legal provisions, however wise, benevolent and responsible, will be secure against the individual desire to escape from them. | Roger Scruton | ||
| b78042d | I think we can all see the force of the idea that there are certain things that cannot be done to human beings - certain basic goods, including life itself, that cannot be taken away from them unless they in some way forfeit them. Life, | Roger Scruton | ||
| ca8f4d4 | Furthermore, we can understand those basic freedoms as rights partly because we can understand the reciprocal duty to respect them. My right to life is your duty not to kill me: and duties of non-encroachment and non-infliction are naturally upheld by morality and easily enforced by the law. However, | Roger Scruton | ||
| 6836bb6 | Academic philosophers in the English speaking world still regard philosophy as Locke defined it in the 17th century, as "the handmaiden of the sciences": it doesn't explore the world beyond science but the limits of science, with the result that philosophy doesnt really intrude into the public world. In the early 20th century were were caught up by the movement to form analytical philosophy, based in the study of logic, the foundations of m.. | Roger Scruton | ||
| a37b0fc | The idea that scientific method is the only method of discovering the truth has a lot to be said for it, if you mean by truth how the world ultimately is as a system of organised matter, but I defend cognitive dualism: that world can be understood completely in another way which also has its truths which are not translatable into the truths of science. So we have to look at the different ways we organise this material that science explains .. | Roger Scruton | ||
| f6c2c19 | One of the great gifts of the Enlightenment is that we can form communities without necessaily agreeing on ultimate metaphysical grounds. We know that to a great extent that the principles of social coordination are manmade, we recognise the right of the other to exist. This is something that distinguishes our part of the world from the middle East. | Roger Scruton | ||
| b38f634 | in a thousand ways people combine not just in circles of friendship but in formal associations, willingly adopting and submitting to rules and procedures that regiment their conduct and make them accountable for doing things correctly. Such associations are a source not only of enjoyment but also of pride: they create hierarchies, offices and rules to which people willingly submit because they can see the point of them. They are also viewed.. | Roger Scruton | ||
| 16ca182 | There is, in the circumstances of modern life, only one solution to the problem of resentment, and that is social mobility. The worst thing that the state can do is to create those traps - the poverty trap, the welfare trap, the education trap - which deprive people of the motives and the skills to improve their lot, and retain them in a state of permanent discontented dependence on a world that they cannot fully enter. In | Roger Scruton |