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James Mackintosh Quotes

Scottish historian, Death: 30-5-1832 James Mackintosh Quotes
1.
The powers of a man's mind are directly proportional to the quantity of coffee he drank.
James Mackintosh

2.
Diffused knowledge immortalizes itself.
James Mackintosh

3.
Men are never so good or so bad as their opinions.
James Mackintosh

4.
The Commons, faithful to their system, remained in a wise and masterly inactivity.
James Mackintosh

5.
The frivolous work of polished idleness.
James Mackintosh

Similar Authors: Samuel Johnson Thomas Carlyle Voltaire Woodrow Wilson Niccolo Machiavelli Edward Gibbon Newt Gingrich Alexis de Tocqueville Hannah Arendt Howard Zinn Carl Sandburg Michel Foucault Will Durant David McCullough Hilaire Belloc
6.
Maxims are the condensed good sense of nations.
James Mackintosh

7.
Whatever is popular deserves attention.
James Mackintosh

8.
A vice utterly at variance with the happiness of him who harbors it, and, as such, condemned by self-love.
James Mackintosh

Quote Topics by James Mackintosh: Mind Men Opinion Song Polished Praise Work Grace Knowledge Regulation Faith Freedom Fellow Man Responsibility Vices Generosity Labor Positive Taught Good Sense Attention Coffee Inspiring Language Frivolous Sex Self Knowledge Philosophy Faithful Virtue
9.
Praise is the symbol which represents sympathy, and which the mind insensibly substitutes for its recollection and language.
James Mackintosh

10.
It is right to be content with what we have, never with what we are.
James Mackintosh

11.
Those who differ most from the opinions of their fellow men are the most confident of the truth of their own.
James Mackintosh

12.
The wealth of society is its stock of productive labor.
James Mackintosh

13.
It is not because we have been free, but because we have a right to be free, that we ought to demand freedom. Justice and liberty have neither birth nor race, youth nor age.
James Mackintosh

14.
Those who preached faith, or in other words a pure mind, have always produced more popular virtue than those who preached good acts, or the mere regulation of outward works.
James Mackintosh

15.
The feminine graces of Madame de Sevigne's genius are exquisitely charming; but the philosophy and eloquence of Madame de Stael are above the distinction of sex.
James Mackintosh

16.
Every fiction since Homer has taught friendship, patriotism, generosity, contempt of death. These are the highest virtues; and the fictions which taught them were therefore of the highest, though not of unmixed, utility.
James Mackintosh