Date: 1759
"This faculty Plato called, as it is very properly called, reason, and considered it as what had a right to be the governing principle of the whole."
preview | full record— Smith, Adam (1723-1790)
Date: 1759
"The different passions and appetites, the natural subjects of this ruling principle, but which are so apt to rebel against their master, he reduced to two different classes or orders."
preview | full record— Smith, Adam (1723-1790)
Date: 1759
"The first consisted of those passions, which are founded in pride and resentment, or in what the schoolmen called the irascible part of the soul; ambition, animosity, the love of honour, and the dread of shame, the desire of victory, superiority, and revenge; all those passions, in short, which ...
preview | full record— Smith, Adam (1723-1790)
Date: 1759
"This order of passions, according to this system, was of a more generous and noble nature than the other. They were considered upon many occasions as the auxiliaries of reason, to check and restrain the inferior and brutal appetites. We are often angry at ourselves, it was observed, we often bec...
preview | full record— Smith, Adam (1723-1790)
Date: 1759
"The soft, the amiable, the gentle virtues, all the virtues of indulgent humanity are in comparison but little insisted upon, and seem on the contrary, by the Stoics in particular, to have been often regarded as meer weaknesses which it behoved a wise man not to harbour in his breast."
preview | full record— Smith, Adam (1723-1790)
Date: 1759
"We are so nice in this respect that even a rape dishonours, and the innocence of the mind cannot, in our imagination, wash out the pollution of the body."
preview | full record— Smith, Adam (1723-1790)
Date: 1759
"Dr. Hutcheson was so far from allowing self-love to be in any case a motive of virtuous actions, that even a regard to the pleasure of self-approbation, to the comfortable applause of our own consciences, according to him diminished the merit of a benevolent action."
preview | full record— Smith, Adam (1723-1790)
Date: 1759
A Logician is "one, that has been broke / To Ride and Pace his Reason by the Booke, And by their Rules, and Precepts, and Examples, / To put his wits into a kind of Trammells."
preview | full record— Butler, Samuel (1613-1680)
Date: 1759
"As no Man mind's those Clocks that use to go / Apparently to[o] over fast, or slow."
preview | full record— Butler, Samuel (1613-1680)
Date: 1759
"The mind of a man of Genius is a fertile and pleasant field, pleasant as Elysium, and fertile as Tempe"
preview | full record— Young, Edward (bap. 1683, d. 1765)