Murray Bookchin Quotes
Collection of top 19 famous quotes about Murray Bookchin
Murray Bookchin Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Murray Bookchin quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Nothing apparently, disturbed the mans air of having his mind on something more important than you. You wanted to slap him.
— Glen Duncan
The ecological principle of unity in diversity grades into a richly mediated social principle; hence my use of the term social ecology.
— Murray Bookchin
I wish we could see Hamilton.
— Jenny Han
The only idea they have ever manifested as to what is a government of consent, is this
that it is one to which everybody must consent, or be shot. — Lysander Spooner
that it is one to which everybody must consent, or be shot. — Lysander Spooner
Poetry to me is prayer ...
— Anne Sexton
I would like to leave this world and never return. I severed my ear, but how I wish that I had severed my heart. I shall never amount to anything.
— Vincent Van Gogh
An anarchist society, far from being a remote ideal, has become a precondition for the practice of ecological principles.
— Murray Bookchin
Capitalism is a social cancer. It has always been a social cancer. It is the disease of society. It is the malignancy of society.
— Murray Bookchin
To use folk language, vernacular in a manner neither exotic nor comic, neither minstrelized nor microscopically analyzed.
— Toni Morrison
Our Being is Becoming, not stasis. Our Science is Utopia, our Reality is Eros, our Desire is Revolution.
— Murray Bookchin
What we call the secret of happiness is no more a secret than our willingness to choose life.
— Leo Buscaglia
I think that everything's hard now anyways, so you might as well do stuff that you love and believe in.
— Joan Cusack
The assumption that what currently exists must necessarily exist is the acid that corrodes all visionary thinking.
— Murray Bookchin
If we do not do the impossible, we shall be faced with the unthinkable.
— Murray Bookchin
People are never free of trying to be content.
— Murray Bookchin
It is our duty never to speak ill of others, you know; least of all when we know that to do so will be the cause of much pain and trouble.
— George Gissing