Mark Kingwell Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Mark Kingwell's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Professor Mark Kingwell's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 23 quotes on this page collected since March 1, 1963! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
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  • For every apparent gain, in short, we now observe a balancing danger. This is the world we have created.

    World   Gains   Danger  
    Mark Kingwell (2000). “The World We Want: Restoring Citizenship in a Fractured Age”, p.165, Rowman & Littlefield
  • I hold to the idea that civility, understood as the willingness to engage in public discourse, is the first virtue of citizens.

    Ideas   Citizens   Firsts  
    "The World We Want: Virtue, Vice, and the Good Citizen". Book by Mark Kingwell, 2000.
  • Procrastination most often arises from a sense that there is too much to do, and hence no single aspect of the to-do worth doing. . . . Underneath this rather antic form of action-as-inaction is the much more unsettling question whether anything is worth doing at all.

    "Later" by James Surowiecki, www.newyorker.com. October 11, 2010.
  • Socrates was likewise right that pissing people off is how we first, and maybe best, go about the business of provoking thought.

    Mark Kingwell (2000). “The World We Want: Restoring Citizenship in a Fractured Age”, p.159, Rowman & Littlefield
  • Ambition is ever tempered by experience. Otherwise, fortune makes fools of us all.

    Ambition   Fool   Fortune  
    Mark Kingwell (2000). “The World We Want: Restoring Citizenship in a Fractured Age”, p.77, Rowman & Littlefield
  • We don't know what the future will bring, but that's because we are ever in the process of creating it, not because it is an alien force to which we have to submit.

    Mark Kingwell (2000). “The World We Want: Restoring Citizenship in a Fractured Age”, p.222, Rowman & Littlefield
  • Tyranny is abhorrent, freedom benefits all, whereas violence benefits no one for long.

    Mark Kingwell (2000). “The World We Want: Restoring Citizenship in a Fractured Age”, p.90, Rowman & Littlefield
  • Our desires are never wholly transparent, even to ourselves.

    Mark Kingwell (2000). “The World We Want: Restoring Citizenship in a Fractured Age”, p.42, Rowman & Littlefield
  • Dreams are evidence that we are creatures who produce more meaning than we can ourselves understand.

    Mark Kingwell (2000). “The World We Want: Restoring Citizenship in a Fractured Age”, p.146, Rowman & Littlefield
  • Concrete is momentarily unformed matter seeking its natural completion, filling in the last corners of its allowed space, finding a form. It is possibility rendered material, hope in an industrial-strength mixer.

  • How doe we create the world we want, rather than a world that just happens to us?

    Doe   World   Want  
    Mark Kingwell (2000). “The World We Want: Restoring Citizenship in a Fractured Age”, p.207, Rowman & Littlefield
  • We are capitalism made flesh.

    Flesh   Made   Capitalism  
    "The World We Want: Restoring Citizenship in a Fractured Age". Book by Mark Kingwell, 2000.
  • Politics is rather the creation of the best possible polity out of the deep inner needs of its citizenry - who are only some of its members.

    Mark Kingwell (2000). “The World We Want: Restoring Citizenship in a Fractured Age”, p.38, Rowman & Littlefield
  • Paradoxically, the problems of politics often arise not in the form of a problem of scarcity, but as one of abundance.

    Mark Kingwell (2000). “The world we want: restoring citizenship in a fractured age”
  • Never before, I suspect, have so many people been so rich to so little purpose.

    Mark Kingwell (2000). “The World We Want: Restoring Citizenship in a Fractured Age”, p.209, Rowman & Littlefield
  • Neiman's book is written with considerable flair, as many critics have already noted, but it possesses a far rarer and more valuable quality: moral seriousness. Her argument builds a powerful emotional force, a sense of deep inevitability. . . . It is not often that a work of such dark conclusions has felt so hopeful and brave.

    Powerful   Book   Dark  
  • War is smaller in scale than in recent memory, but it is far more ambiguous, intractable, and nasty. Money flows more quickly than ever, but it is still somehow manages to gather and puddle in certain places, for certain people rather then others.

    Memories   War   People  
    "The World We Want: Restoring Citizenship in a Fractured Age". Book by Mark Kingwell, 2000.
  • We tend to think of the problems of globalization and cultural identity as peculiar to our times. In fact they are rooted in ancient problems of civic belonging.

    Mark Kingwell (2000). “The World We Want: Restoring Citizenship in a Fractured Age”, p.3, Rowman & Littlefield
  • If you have ever been accused of being rude when you were merely stating the truth, or called a gossip because you like to dwell on other people's actions, Westacott is for you. His linked studies of everyday vices offer elegant analysis of the goods that lurk in behavior that is usually condemned. This wise book is practical philosophy in the best sense.

    Wise   Philosophy   Book  
  • Friendship requires a leap, not of faith but of regard.

    Leap   Regard  
    Mark Kingwell (2000). “The World We Want: Restoring Citizenship in a Fractured Age”, p.85, Rowman & Littlefield
  • Books, like lives, are always unfinished even when they end, for to write is to struggle with contingency, to impose a certain false order upon the endless, and endlessly frustrating, nature of thought.

    Struggle   Book   Writing  
    Mark Kingwell (2000). “The World We Want: Restoring Citizenship in a Fractured Age”, p.22, Rowman & Littlefield
  • All social space is suffused with political meanings and agendas, the very stones and walls a kind of testament to the ongoing struggles for liberation and justices.

    Wall   Struggle   Space  
    Mark Kingwell (2000). “The World We Want: Restoring Citizenship in a Fractured Age”, p.174, Rowman & Littlefield
  • If anyone is tweeting right now, I'm not pulling a knife on David Cronenberg!

    Knives   Pulling   Ifs  
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We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 23 quotes from the Professor Mark Kingwell, starting from March 1, 1963! We periodically replenish our collection so that visitors of our website can always find inspirational quotes by authors from all over the world! Come back to us again!
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