"The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts."
"In the higher walks of politics the same sort of thing occurs. The statesman who has gradually concentrated all power within himself ... may have had anything but a public motive... The phrases which are customary on the platform and in the Party Press have gradually come to him to seem to express truths, and he mistakes the rhetoric of partisanship for a genuine analysis of motives... He retires from the world after the world has retired from him."
3 likes
Source: Bertrand Russell (2009). “Unpopular Essays”, p.77, Routledge
About the author