300 Quotes by Karen Armstrong


  • Author Karen Armstrong
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    There is also a widespread assumption that the Bible is supposed to provide us with role models and give us precise moral teaching, but this was not the intention of the biblical authors. The Eden story is certainly not a morality tale; like any paradise myth, it is an imaginary account of the infancy of the human race.

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  • Author Karen Armstrong
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    One of the characteristics of early modern thought was a tendency to assume binary contrasts. In an attempt to define phenomena more exactly, categories of experience that had once co-inhered were now set off against each other: faith and reason, intellect and emotion, and church and state.

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  • Author Karen Armstrong
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    Since all premodern state ideology was inseparable from religion, warfare inevitably acquired a sacral element.

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  • Author Karen Armstrong
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    But during the nineteenth century, Europe was reconfigured into clearly defined states ruled by a central government.

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  • Author Karen Armstrong
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    Fighting and obtaining wealth were inseparable and interconnected: freed from the need to engage in productive work, the nobility had the leisure to cultivate their martial skills.84 They certainly fought for honor, glory, and the sheer pleasure of battle, but warfare was, “perhaps above all, a source of profit, the nobleman’s chief industry.”85 It needed no justification, because its necessity seemed self-evident.

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  • Author Karen Armstrong
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    There is always a moment in warfare when the horrifying reality breaks through the glamour.

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  • Author Karen Armstrong
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    Religious people often prefer to be right rather than compassionate. Often, they don’t want to give up their egotism. They want their religion to endorse their ego, their identity.

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  • Author Karen Armstrong
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    The guilt and anxiety induced by hunting, combined with frustration resulting from ritual celibacy, could have been projected onto the image of a powerful woman, who demands endless bloodshed.27 The hunters could see that women were the source of new life; it was they – not the expendable males – who ensured the continuity of the tribe. The female thus became an awe-inspiring icon of life itself – a life that required the ceaseless sacrifice of men and animals.

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