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Quotation of the day
Wednesday, 3 December 2008
Daily Quote:
"As societies grow decadent, the language grows decadent, too. Words are used to disguise, not to illuminate, action: you liberate a city by destroying it. Words are to confuse, so that at election time people will solemnly vote against their own interests" (Vidal, Gore - Language)

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Proverb of the Day
All that glitters is not gold.

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Browse Quotations about Skepticism

A mind that questions everything, unless strong enough to bear the weight of its ignorance, risks questioning itself and being engulfed in doubt. If it cannot discover the claims to existence of the objects of its questioning -- and it would be miraculous if it so soon succeeded in solving so many mysteries -- it will deny them all reality, the mere formulation of the problem already implying an inclination to negative solutions. But in so doing it will become void of all positive content and, finding nothing which offers it resistance, will launch itself perforce into the emptiness of inner revere.
A skeptic is a person who, when he sees the handwriting on the wall, claims it is a forgery.
Cautiousness in judgment is nowadays to be recommended to each and every one: if we gained only one incontestable truth every ten years from each of our philosophical writers the harvest we reaped would be sufficient.
He talks about the Scylla of Atheism and the Charybdis of Christianity -- a state of mind which, by the way, is not conducive to bold navigation.
If I am fool, it is, at least, a doubting one; and I envy no one the certainty of his self-approved wisdom.
If only God would give me some clear sign! Like making a large deposit in my name at a Swiss bank.
Nearly all the powerful people of this age are unbelievers, the best of them in doubt and misery, the most in plodding hesitation, doing as well as they can, what practical work lies at hand.
Skepticism has never founded empires, established principals, or changed the world's heart. The great doers in history have always been people of faith.
Skepticism, as I said, is not intellectual only; it is moral also; a chronic atrophy and disease of the whole soul. A man lives by believing something; not by debating and arguing about many things. A sad case for him when all that he can manage to believe is something he can button in his pocket, and with one or the other organ eat and digest! Lower than that he will not get.
Skepticism, is that anything more than we used to mean when we said, Well, what have we here?
Skepticism, riddling the faith of yesterday, prepared the way for the faith of tomorrow.
Skepticism: the mark and even the pose of the educated mind.
The empiricist... thinks he believes only what he sees, but he is much better at believing than at seeing.
The poison of skepticism becomes, like alcoholism, tuberculosis, and some other diseases, much more virulent in a hitherto virgin soil.
The skeptic does not mean him who doubts, but him who investigates or researches, as opposed to him who asserts and thinks that he has found.
There is a kind of courtesy in skepticism. It would be an offense against polite conventions to press our doubts too far.
There is something pagan in me that I cannot shake off. In short, I deny nothing, but doubt everything.
Truth, Sir, is a cow which will yield such people no more milk, and so they are gone to milk the bull.
We, when we sow the seeds of doubt deeper than the most up-to-date and modish free-thought has ever dreamed of doing, we well know what we are about. Only out of radical skeptics, out of moral chaos, can the Absolute spring, the anointed Terror of which the time has need.

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