1,551 Quotes by Bertrand Russell

  • Author Bertrand Russell
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    Are you never afraid of God's judgement in denying him? Most certainly not. I also deny Zeus and Jupiter and Odin and Brahma, but this causes me no qualms. I observe that a very large portion of the human race does not believe in God and suffers no visible punishment in consequence. And if there were a God, I think it very unlikely that He would have such an uneasy vanity as to be offended by those who doubt His existence.

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  • Author Bertrand Russell
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    Thee will find out in time that I have a great love of professing vile sentiments, I don't know why, unless it springs from long efforts to avoid priggery.

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  • Author Bertrand Russell
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    ... the whole world of loneliness, poverty, and pain make a mockery of what human life should be.

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  • Author Bertrand Russell
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    All's well that ends well; which is the epitaph I should put on my tombstone if I were the last man left alive.

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  • Author Bertrand Russell
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    Dr. Arnold . . . the admired reformer of public schools, came across some cranks who thought it a mistake to flog boys. Anyone reading his outburst of furious indignation against this opinion will be forced to the conclusion that he enjoyed inflicting floggings.

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  • Author Bertrand Russell
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    Organizations are of two kinds, those which aim at getting something done, and those which aim at preventing something from being done

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  • Author Bertrand Russell
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    Bacon not only despised the syllogism, but undervalued mathematics, presumably as insufficiently experimental. He was virulently hostile to Aristotle , but he thought very highly of Democritus , Although he did not deny that the course of nature exemplifies a Divine purpose, he objected to any admixture of teleological explanation in the actual investigation of phenomena; everything, he held, should be explained as following necessarily from efficient causes .

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  • Author Bertrand Russell
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    Hegel's philosophy is so odd that one would not have expected him to be able to get sane men to accept it, but he did. He set it out with so much obscurity that people thought it must be profound. It can quite easily be expounded lucidly in words of one syllable, but then its absurdity becomes obvious.

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