Justice & Rights Sayings

232 sayings found from 232 authors

Our judgements concerning moral distinctions are derived from the moral sentiment, and not from reason.

— David Hume 1751
Justice & Rights

The development of the world is the development of the idea of freedom.

— Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel 1837 (posthumous)
Justice & Rights

For it is not the bare words, but the scope of the speaker, that giveth the true interpretation of a law.

— Thomas Hobbes 1651
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The greatest dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men of zeal, well-meaning but without understanding.

— John Stuart Mill 1859
Justice & Rights

Peace is not an absence of war, it is a virtue, a state of mind, a disposition for benevolence, confidence, justice.

— Baruch Spinoza 1677
Justice & Rights

It is a strange desire, to seek power and to lose liberty.

— Francis Bacon 1625
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People demand freedom of speech as a compensation for the freedom of thought which they seldom use.

— Soren Kierkegaard 1849
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Freedom is what you do with what's been done to you.

— Jean-Paul Sartre 1972
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The greatest scandal of the world is the one we are all guilty of: the fact that we are born.

— Simone de Beauvoir 1949
Justice & Rights

What is prison? It is a machine for grinding out delinquents.

— Michel Foucault 1975
Justice & Rights

The more you can increase fear of drugs and crime, welfare mothers, immigrants and terrorists, the more you control all the people.

— Noam Chomsky 1992
Justice & Rights

The only way to escape the personal consequences of freedom is to give up the very freedom itself.

— Hannah Arendt 1961
Justice & Rights

The degree of civilization in a society can be judged by entering its prisons.

— Bertrand Russell Approx. 1950s-1960s
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Man is mortal, that may be; but let us die resisting, and if we die, let us die with the certainty that we have not betrayed justice.

— Albert Camus 1960 (published posthumously)
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The greatest fruit of self-sufficiency is freedom.

— Epicurus c. 300 BCE
Justice & Rights

The happy life is to be found in the mind's freedom from disturbance.

— Seneca c. 65 AD
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It is better to starve to death in freedom from grief and fear, than to live in plenty with perturbation.

— Epictetus c. 108 AD
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I glow with indignation when I contemplate the slavery of half the human race.

— Mary Wollstonecraft 1792
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Freedom is the recognition of necessity.

— Friedrich Engels 1878
Justice & Rights

The Americans are a people who are always talking about liberty, but they are also a people who are always ready to give it up.

— Alexis de Tocqueville 1835
Justice & Rights
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