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Paradise Lost
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The Cure at Troy:...
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The Road to Serfdom
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Book cover for Statesman
Shall we call this art of tending many animals together, the art of managing a herd, or the art of collective management?
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Michel de Montaigne
“Provided that a writer of almanacs has already gained enough authority for people to bother to read his books, examining his words for implications and shades of meaning, he can be made to say anything whatever – like Sybils. There are so many ways of taking anything, that it is hard for a clever mind not to find in almost any subject something or other which appears to serve his point, directly or indirectly. [C] That explains why an opaque, ambiguous style has been so long in vogue. All an author needs to do is to attract the concern and attention of posterity. (He may achieve that not so much by merit as by some chance interest in his subject-matter.) Then, whether out of subtlety or stupidity, he can contradict himself or express himself obscurely: no matter! Numerous minds will get out their sieves, sifting and forcing any number of ideas through them, some of them relevant, some off the point, some flat contradictory to his intentions, but all of them doing him honour. He will grow rich out of his students’ resources – like dons being paid their midsummer fees at the Lendit fair.”
Michel de Montaigne, The Complete Essays

“It is a violation of the laws of nature to swing your sword at those shackled by tyranny. Swing it at the shackles or swing it at the tyrant. Leave the innocents be.”
J. W. Barlament

Michel de Montaigne
“The natural, original distemper of Man is presumption.”
Michel de Montaigne, The Complete Essays

Albert Camus
“A novel is never anything but a philosophy expressed in images. And in a good novel the philosophy has disappeared into the images.”
Albert Camus, Lyrical and Critical Essays

14666 Johnnies — 88 members — last activity Jul 05, 2017 11:39AM
Open to anyone interested in reading and discussing the Great Books, this group was created especially for students, alumni and friends of St. John's ...more
19860 Classics and the Western Canon — 4895 members — last activity 21 hours, 45 min ago
This is a group to read and discuss those books generally referred to as “the classics” or “the Western canon.” Books which have shaped Western though ...more
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