"During the first period—roughly to be dated from 1855 to 1863—he was hopefully striving, under the influence of Döllinger (his teacher from the age of seventeen) to educate his co-religionists in breadth and sympathy, and to place before his countrymen ideals of right in politics, which were to him bound up with the Catholic faith. The combination of scientific inquiry with true rules of political justice he claimed, in a letter to Döllinger, as the aim of the Home and Foreign Review. ...a quarterly ...far surpassing, alike in knowledge, range, and certainty, any of the other quarterlies, political, or ecclesiastical, or specialist, which the nineteenth century produced. ...superior, while it displayed a cosmopolitan interest foreign to most English journals."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Historians from EnglandMembers of the Parliament of the United KingdomBritish peersUniversity of Oxford facultyNon-fiction authors from the United Kingdom
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Imported from EN Wikiquote
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/John_Dalberg-Acton%2C_1st_Baron_Acton
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
John Dalberg-Acton, 1st Baron Acton
John Emerich Edward Dalberg Acton, 1st Baron Acton (10 January 1834 – 19 June 1902) was an English Catholic historian, commonly known as Lord Acton.
158 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by John Dalberg-Acton, 1st Baron Acton →
Related Quotes
"The English constitution was excellent until removed by foreign writers into the domain of theory, when in direct con…"
"There is a wide divergence, an irreconcilable disagreement, between the political notions of the modern world and tha…"
"There are two things which cannot be attacked in front: ignorance and narrow-mindedness. They can only be shaken by t…"
"Every thing secret degenerates, even the administration of justice; nothing is safe that does not show how it can bea…"
"The nation had no instinct and no productive power that emancipated it from the customs of its forefathers. Every app…"
"Without presuming to decide the purely legal question, on which it seems evident to me from Madison's and Hamilton's …"
"Patriotism is in political life what faith is in religion, and it stands to the domestic feelings and to home-sicknes…"
"The man who prefers his country before every other duty shows the same spirit as the man who surrenders every right t…"
"A State which is incompetent to satisfy different races condemns itself; a State which labours to neutralise, to abso…"
"We must not pursue science for ends independent of science. It must be pursued for its own sake, and must lead to its…"