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Ends And Means Quotes

Quotes tagged as "ends-and-means" Showing 1-6 of 6
Tsugumi Ohba
“Kira is evil ... There's no denying that ... But lately I've been starting to think of it more like this ... The real evil is the power to kill people. Someone who finds himself with that power is cursed. No matter how you use it, anything obtained by killing people can never bring true happiness.”
Tsugumi Ohba, Death Note, Vol. 3: Hard Run

Aldous Huxley
“The function of the well-intentioned individual, acting in isolation, is to formulate or disseminate theoretical truths. The function of the well-intentioned individuals in association is to live in accordance with those truths, to demonstrate what happens when theory is translated into practice, to create small-scale working models of the better form of society to which the speculative idealist looks forward.”
Aldous Huxley, Ends and Means

Aldous Huxley
“All of us desire a better state of society. But society cannot become better before two great tasks are performed.Unless peace can be firmly established and the prevailing obsession with money and power profoundly modified, there is no hope of any desirable change being made.”
Aldous Huxley

P.D. James
“You desire the end but close your eyes to the means. You want the garden to be beautiful, provided that the smell of manure is kept well away from your fastidious nose.”
P.D. James, The Children of Men

Luke Lively
“Putting some 'gray in play,' as Chad referred to it, always helped. HE said the act of rationalizing the pros and cons helped to cloud the issues enough to avoid a moral quandary. It allowed us to believe the ends justified the means. Seeing gray helped to remove the black-and-white, right and wrong ethical choices.. . Had I become so jaded in my life that I had actually forgotten the difference between right and wrong? Or had I simply tried to ignore the difference so I could sleep at least two or three hours a night?”
Luke Lively

José Saramago
“Les jours se suivent et ne se ressemblent pas, ou dans une version plus littéraire, de même qu'aucun bonheur ne dure éternellement , de même que le malheur finit par cesser. Maximes suprêmes de qui a eu le temps de tirer leçon des revers de la vie et de la fortune..”
José Saramago, Blindness