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Beatrice Webb Quotes

English sociologist and economist (b. 1858), Birth: 22-1-1858, Death: 30-4-1943 Beatrice Webb Quotes
1.
Religion is love; in no case is it logic.
Beatrice Webb

2.
. . . if I had been a man, self-respect, family pressure and the public opinion of my class would have pushed me into a money-making profession; as a mere woman I could carve out a career of disinterested research.
Beatrice Webb

3.
Nature still obstinately refuses to co-operate by making the rich people innately superior to the poor people.
Beatrice Webb

4.
the possession of wealth, and especially the inheritance of wealth, seems almost invariably to sterilize genius.
Beatrice Webb

5.
Work is the best of narcotics, providing the patient be strong enough to take it. I dread idleness as if it were Hell.
Beatrice Webb

Similar Authors: Ludwig von Mises John Kenneth Galbraith Milton Friedman John Stuart Mill Paul Ryan Kofi Annan John Maynard Keynes Theodor Adorno Daniel Kahneman Adam Smith Jean Baudrillard Ken Wilber Paul Krugman Muhammad Yunus Robert Reich
6.
If I ever felt inclined to be timid as I was going into a room hill of people, I would say to myself, "You're the cleverest member of one of the cleverest families in the cleverest class of the cleverest nation in the world-why should you be frightened?
Beatrice Webb

7.
Beneath the surface of our daily life, in the personal history of many of us, there runs a continuous controversy between an Ego that affirms and an Ego that denies.
Beatrice Webb

8.
The interruptions of the telephone seem to us to waste half the life of the ordinary American engaged in public or private business; he has seldom half an hour consecutively at his own disposal - a telephone is a veritable time scatterer.
Beatrice Webb

Quote Topics by Beatrice Webb: Men Class People Wealth Fear Trying Cabinets Ego Government Education Patient Lines Strong Nature Waste Drifting Half Women Political May Love Answers Animal Genius Identity Facts Writing Personal History Littles Self
9.
It would be curious to discover who it is to whom one writes in a diary. Possibly to some mysterious personification of one's own identity.
Beatrice Webb

10.
All along the line, physically, mentally, morally, alcohol is a weakening and deadening force.
Beatrice Webb

11.
If a weakly mortal is to do anything in the world besides eat the bread thereof, there must be a determined subordination of the whole nature to the one aim no trifling with time, which is passing, with strength which is only too limited.
Beatrice Webb

12.
Renunciation - that is the great fact we all, individuals and classes, have to learn. In trying to avoid it we bring misery to ourselves and others.
Beatrice Webb

13.
At present I feel like a caged animal, bound up by the luxury, comfort and respectability of my position. I can't get the training that I want without neglecting my duty.
Beatrice Webb

14.
we have not been impressed with any attribute of the Senate other than its appearance and manners. We have heard the best speakers: they all fire off speeches which deal with the entire subject in general terms and which do not attempt to debate, to answer opponents' arguments or offer new points for discussion. And the speeches are constantly degenerating into empty rhetoric; they abound in quotations from well-known authors or from their own former speeches.
Beatrice Webb

15.
That part of the Englishman's nature which has found gratification in religion is now drifting into political life.
Beatrice Webb

16.
Are all Cabinets congeries of little autocrats with a super-autocrat presiding over them?
Beatrice Webb

17.
Harris had the egotistical dogmatism of the self-made man who had painfully educated himself without contact with superior brains.
Beatrice Webb

18.
The middle man governs, however extreme may seem to be the men who sit on the Front Bench, in their reactionary or revolutionary opinions.
Beatrice Webb