Ludwig Quidde Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Ludwig Quidde's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from German Politician Ludwig Quidde's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 24 quotes on this page collected since March 23, 1858! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
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  • The popular, and one may say naive, idea is that peace can be secured by disarmament and that disarmament must therefore precede the attainment of absolute security and lasting peace.

  • In life, particularly in public life, psychology is more powerful than logic.

  • Lightly armed nations can move toward war just as easily as those which are armed to the teeth, and they will do so if the usual causes of war are not removed.

    War   Moving   Usual  
  • I am convinced that when the history of international law comes to be written centuries hence, it will be divided into two periods: the first being from the earliest times to the end of the nineteenth century, and the second beginning with the Hague Conference.

    Law   Two   Firsts  
  • Disarmament or limitation of armaments, which depends on the progress made on security, also contributes to the maintenance of peace.

  • It will be sufficient to point to the enormous burdens which armaments place on the economic, social, and intellectual resources of a nation, as well as on its budget and taxes.

  • The relationship of the two problems is rather the reverse. To a great extent disarmament is dependent on guarantees of peace. Security comes first and disarmament second.

  • The following year, after I had prepared my draft, the Conference of the Interparliamentary Union at The Hague decided to set up a special commission to study the problem seriously.

    Years   Special   Unions  
  • Pacifist propaganda and the resolutions of the parliamentarians encouraged such treaties, and toward the end of the nineteenth century their number had increased considerably.

  • When distrust exists between governments, when there is a danger of war, they will not be willing to disarm even when logic indicates that disarmament would not affect military security at all.

  • Armaments are necessary - or are maintained on the pretext of necessity - because of a real or an imagined danger of war.

    Real   War   Danger  
  • The present level of armaments could be taken as the starting point. It could be stipulated in an international treaty that these armaments should be simultaneously and uniformly reduced by a certain proportion in all countries.

    Country   Taken   Levels  
  • Every success in limiting armaments is a sign that the will to achieve mutual understanding exists, and every such success thus supports the fight for international law and order.

    Fighting   Order   Law  
  • Among pacifists it was above all the English who always insisted on the importance of disarmament. They said that the man in the street would not understand the kind of pacifism that neglected to demand immediate restriction of armaments.

    Men   Demand   Kind  
  • Time and time again we have experienced efforts directed toward this popular and simple concept of securing peace by means of disarmament.

    Mean   Simple   Effort  
  • We pacifists have not ceased to point to the grave danger of armaments and to insist on their curtailment.

  • Thus, if armaments were curtailed without a secure peace and all countries disarmed proportionately, military security would have been in no way affected.

    Country   Military   Way  
  • Some pacifists have carried the sound idea of the prime importance of security too far, to the point of declaring that any consideration of disarmament is superfluous and pointless as long as eternal peace has not been attained.

    Ideas   Long   Sound  
  • Let us assume that the ideal were reached; let us imagine a state of international life in which the danger of war no longer exists. Then no one would dare to demand a penny for obviously completely superfluous armaments.

    War   Demand   Pennies  
  • So long as peace is not attained by law (so argue the advocates of armaments) the military protection of a country must not be undermined, and until such is the case disarmament is impossible.

    Country   Military   Law  
  • Great progress was made when arbitration treaties were concluded in which the contracting powers pledge in advance to submit all conflicts to an arbitration court, treaties which not only specify the composition of the court, but also its procedure.

  • Even a total and universal disarmament does not guarantee the maintenance of peace.

  • Limitation of armaments in itself is economically and financially important quite apart from security.

  • The security of which we speak is to be attained by the development of international law through an international organization based on the principles of law and justice.

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We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 24 quotes from the German Politician Ludwig Quidde, starting from March 23, 1858! 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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