SOCIETY QUOTES IX

quotations about society

Man is a social being, and needs society and laws regulating social intercourse between states, tribes, and nations, as much as between individuals.

WILLIAM H. SEWARD

William H. Seward's Travels Around the World


I know, sir, that the people talk about the liberty of nature, and assert, that we divest ourselves of a portion of it, when we enter into society. This is declamation against matter of fact. We cannot live without society; and as to liberty, how can I be said to enjoy that which another may take from me, when he pleases. The liberty of one depends not so much on the removal of all restraint from him, as on the due restraint upon the liberty of others. Without such restraint, there can be no liberty. Liberty is so far from being endangered or destroyed by this, that it is extended and secured. For I said, that we do not enjoy that which another may take from us. But civil liberty cannot be taken from us, when any one may please to invade it; for we have the strength of the society on our side.

FISHER AMES

speech in the Convention of Massachusetts, on Biennial Elections, January 1788


Society is the master, and man is the servant; and it is entirely according as society proves a good or bad master, whether he turns out a bad or good servant.

GEORGE AUGUSTUS HENRY SALA

attributed, Day's Collacon


Men living always in groups cooperate like the organs in an organism. Their actions have a common impulse and a common end. Their desires and opinions bear the common stamp of an impersonal direction. Much of their life is common to all. The roads, market-places and temples, are for each and all. The experiences, the dogmas, and the doctrines are for each and all. Customs arise, and are formulated in laws, the restraint of all. The customs, born of the circumstances, immanent in the social conditions, are consciously extricated and prescribed as the rules of life; each new generation is born in this social medium, and has to adapt itself to the established forms.

GEORGE HENRY LEWES

Problems of Life and Mind

Tags: George Henry Lewes


Society is the mother of us all.

JOHN DANIEL BARRY

"The Perfect Mother", Reactions and Other Essays


Society, To all the leaders it's a game and it's making you insane
Society, Data patterns are supplied proof tap back up all the lies
Hardly alive
Society, Pay your taxes stand in line help them plan for your demise.

PENNYWISE

"Society"


In human society the warmth is mainly at the bottom.

NOEL JACK COUNHIAN

Age


Society is like air; very high up, it is sublimated--too low down, a perfect chock-damp.

THOMAS PRUEN

attributed, Day's Collacon


When society requires to be rebuilt, there is no use in attempting to rebuild it on the old plan.

JOHN STUART MILL

Dissertations and Discussions

Tags: John Stuart Mill


Under any system of society ... the family holds the future in its bosom.

CHARLES FRANKLIN THWING

The Family: An Historical and Social Study

Tags: Charles Franklin Thwing


Society is not merely a select body of spiritual or intellectual persons, but a great organism composed of all kinds of members, a net containing bad and good.

ROBERT HUGH BENSON

A City Set on a Hill

Tags: Robert Hugh Benson


The only important elements in any society are the artistic and the criminal, because they alone, by questioning society's values, can force it to change.

SAMUEL R. DELANY

Empire Star

Tags: Samuel R. Delany


Man becomes so accustomed to the society in which he has passed his life, that its institutions, laws, and customs grow upon him until they become a second nature; his feelings, views, and prejudices are so interwoven with its whole mechanism, that he looks upon it as natural, unchangeable, and perfect. So great is his illusion, that the evils he labours under, are attributed to every cause but the true one--the defective organization of society; and while the government, the administration, and even religion are doubted and criticized, the social system, as if it were some thing superior to human imperfection and error, alone commands the respect and reverence of all.

ALBERT BRISBANE

Social Destiny of Man: Or, Association and Reorganization of Industry


The greatest benefactor to society is not he who serves it by single acts, but whose general character is the manifestation of a higher life and spirit than pervades the mass.

WILLIAM E. CHANNING

Thoughts


Society is a hole
It makes me lie to my friends
It's running down my street
With white powers sneakers
On the beautiful beat of black feet

SONIC YOUTH

"Society Is a Hole"


Our societies are changing. It is no longer an atmosphere of repression that weighs upon us, that haunts our streets and our minds. It is the glossy, efficiency-minded atmosphere which is knocking the wind out of us. Literally, euphoria, dumping and acceleration are absorbing all the oxygen from the atmosphere and leaving us like washed-up fish. It is no longer light we are short of, nor cash, but air.

JEAN BAUDRILLARD

Cool Memories

Tags: Jean Baudrillard


Society ... should be viewed only as a titled harlot, elegant and fascinating as a Circe, but false and treacherous as a serpent; agreeable enough to pass an idle hour with, but fatal the moment we give it credit for sincerity, and seek a closer intimacy.

CHARLES WILLIAM DAY

The Maxims, Experiences, and Observations of Agogos

Tags: Charles William Day


Society is like a lawn, where every roughness is smoothed, every bramble eradicated, and where the eye is delighted by the smiling verdure of a velvet surface. He, however, who would study nature in its wildness and variety must plunge into the forest, must explore the glen, must stem the torrent, and dare the precipice.

WASHINGTON IRVING

The Sketch Book

Tags: Washington Irving


A society that gets rid of all its troublemakers goes downhill.

ROBERT A. HEINLEIN

Time Enough for Love

Tags: Robert A. Heinlein


To me the progress of society consists in nothing more than in bringing out the individual, in giving him a consciousness of his own being, and in quickening him to strengthen and elevate his own mind.

WILLIAM E. CHANNING

Thoughts