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Famous People » joseph butler

Joseph Butler

  • As this world was not intended to be a state of any great satisfaction or high enjoyment, so neither was it intended to be a mere scene of unhappiness and sorrow.
    Joseph Butler
  • Both our senses and our passions are a supply to the imperfection of our nature; thus they show that we are such sort of creatures as to stand in need of those helps which higher orders of creatures do not.
    Joseph Butler
  • But to us, probability is the very guide of life.
    Joseph Butler
  • Compassion is a call, a demand of nature, to relieve the unhappy as hunger is a natural call for food.
    Joseph Butler
  • Consequently it will often happen there will be a desire of particular objects, in cases where they cannot be obtained without manifest injury to others.
    Joseph Butler
  • Every man hath a general desire of his own happiness; and likewise a variety of particular affections, passions, and appetites to particular external objects.
    Joseph Butler
  • Every man is to be considered in two capacities, the private and public; as designed to pursue his own interest, and likewise to contribute to the good of others.
    Joseph Butler
  • Every one of our passions and affections hath its natural stint and bound, which may easily be exceeded; whereas our enjoyments can possibly be but in a determinate measure and degree.
    Joseph Butler
  • For as we have many members in one body, and all members have not the same office: so we, being many, are one body in Christ, and every one members one of another.
    Joseph Butler
  • God Almighty is, to be sure, unmoved by passion or appetite, unchanged by affection; but then it is to be added that He neither sees nor hears nor perceives things by any senses like ours; but in a manner infinitely more perfect.
    Joseph Butler
  • Happiness does not consist in self-love.
    Joseph Butler
  • Happiness or satisfaction consists only in the enjoyment of those objects which are by nature suited to our several particular appetites, passions, and affections.
    Joseph Butler
  • However, without considering this connection, there is no doubt but that more good than evil, more delight than sorrow, arises from compassion itself; there being so many things which balance the sorrow of it.
    Joseph Butler
  • Love of our neighbour, then, has just the same respect to, is no more distant from, self-love, than hatred of our neighbour, or than love or hatred of anything else.
    Joseph Butler
  • Man may act according to that principle or inclination which for the present happens to be strongest, and yet act in a way disproportionate to, and violate his real proper nature.
    Joseph Butler
  • Pain and sorrow and misery have a right to our assistance: compassion puts us in mind of the debt, and that we owe it to ourselves as well as to the distressed.
    Joseph Butler
  • People might love themselves with the most entire and unbounded affection, and yet be extremely miserable.
    Joseph Butler
  • Remember likewise there are persons who love fewer words, an inoffensive sort of people, and who deserve some regard, though of too still and composed tempers for you.
    Joseph Butler
  • Self-love then does not constitute THIS or THAT to be our interest or good; but, our interest or good being constituted by nature and supposed, self-love only puts us upon obtaining and securing it.
    Joseph Butler
  • The Epistles in the New Testament have all of them a particular reference to the condition and usages of the Christian world at the time they were written.
    Joseph Butler

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