Quotes about Humanity
After all, what is an individual?
— Aldous Huxley
Science and technology would be used as though, like the Sabbath, they ahd been made for man, not as though man were to be adapted and enslaved to them.
— Aldous Huxley
I ate civilization. It poisoned me; I was defined. And then, I ate my own wickedness.
— Aldous Huxley
And the two essential and indispensable things are first of all intelligence in the right most sense of that word and goodwill or the old fashion word charity/love, I mean these two things have to go hand in hand. Intelligence and knowledge without charity or goodwill would perhaps be inhuman and goodwill or charity undirected by intelligence or knowledge would be either impotent or misguided, the two have to go together.
— Aldous Huxley
She would have laughed if she haven't been at the point of crying.
— Aldous Huxley
It is human variability -- the fact that one man's meat is is another man's poison -- that imposes on us the duty of preserving individual liberty and of encouraging tolerance, of preventing majorities from repressing minorities, of permitting people to have a certain measure of self-determination in their lives.
— Aldous Huxley
Are you sure?" asked the Savage. "Are you quite sure that the Edmund in that pneumatic chair hasn't been just as heavily punished as the Edmund who's wounded and bleeding to death?
— Aldous Huxley
Why don't you give them these books about God? For the same reason as we don't give them Othello; they're old, they're about God hundreds of years ago. Not about God now. But God doesn't change. Men do though.
— Aldous Huxley
A human being in a highly technicized productive unit is simply not allowed to be spontaneous. It just interferes with the plan laid down in advance by the engineers and technicians who decide how he should word, and in this way he, the human being, is profoundly diminished, because he is not permitted to be spontaneous.
— Aldous Huxley
We're all demented sinners in the same cosmic boat —and the boat is perpetually sinking.
— Aldous Huxley
Those who cannot see Christ in the poor are atheists indeed.
— Dorothy Day
It is people who are important, not the masses.
— Dorothy Day