“China’s first emperor tried to destroy collections of records earlier than his reign, so history could be seen to begin with him.” Michael Kesterton Social Studies: The Best of the Globe and Mail’s Daily Miscellany of Information
“Very few problems can or should be solved, in the sense of wiping out every vestige of them – not even crime or disease. Would anyone really spend half the Gross National Product to wipe out the last vestige of shop-lifting, or every minor skin rash?”
Thomas Sowell in Is Reality Optional?
“At age fifty, every man has the face he deserves.” George Orwell
“Diana was not interested in fixing us. Krishna and Siddhartha wanted to fix a different problem. Muhammed supposed that we could fix ourselves. Moses gave us the law of God which shows the true nature of the problem, but he did not give us power to follow it. For that, he looked to the Messiah yet to come, and according to Christianity, that Messiah was Jesus. He is not parallel to any of the others. Only He claimed not to teach but to be the surgery of God.”
J. Budziszewski The Revenge of Conscience
“even if the whole of the man-made world could, through relentless effort and sacrifice, be modelled to rival St. Mark’s Square, even if we could spend the rest of our lives in the Villa Rotonda or the Glass House, we would still often be in a bad mood.”
Alain De Botton The Architecture of Happiness
“The clash between science and religion was supposed to be a defining characteristic of the modern age. But today’s distinctive terror is modern science in the service of religious fanatics – or, in North Korea, of fanatics drunk on the dregs of the pseudo religion of scientific socialism…” George Will in National Post Jan. 2 2003
