Thomas Huxley Quotes About Progress

We have collected for you the TOP of Thomas Huxley's best quotes about Progress! Here are collected all the quotes about Progress starting from the birthday of the Biologist – May 4, 1825! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 2 sayings of Thomas Huxley about Progress. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • If individuality has no play, society does not advance; if individuality breaks out of all bounds, society perishes.

    Thomas Henry Huxley (1872). “More Criticisms on Darwin, and Administrative Nihilism”, p.76
  • The sceptics end in the infidelity which asserts the problem to be insoluble, or in the atheism which denies the existence of any orderly progress and governance of things: the men of genius propound solutions which grow into systems of Theology or of Philosophy, or veiled in musical language which suggests more than it asserts, take the shape of the Poetry of an epoch.

    Thomas Henry Huxley (1997). “The Major Prose of Thomas Henry Huxley”, p.66, University of Georgia Press
  • It ought not to be unpleasant to say that which one honestly believes or disbelieves. That it so constantly is painful to do so, is quite enough obstacle to the progress of mankind in that most valuable of all qualities, honesty of word or of deed.

    Thomas Henry Huxley (2011). “Collected Essays”, p.241, Cambridge University Press
  • Social progress means a checking of the cosmic process at every step and the substitution for it of another, which may be called the ethical process; the end of which is not the survival of those who may happen to be the fittest, in respect of the whole of the conditions which obtain, but of those who are ethically the best.

    Thomas Henry Huxley (1997). “The Major Prose of Thomas Henry Huxley”, p.327, University of Georgia Press
  • Material advancement has its share in moral and intellectual progress. Becky Sharp's acute remark that it is not difficult to be virtuous on ten thousand a year has its applications to nations; and it is futile to expect a hungry and squalid population to be anything but violent and gross.

    Thomas Henry Huxley (1882). “Science and Culture: And Other Essays”
  • Rome is the one great spiritual organisation which is able to resist and must, as a matter of life and death, the progress of science and modern civilization

    Thomas Henry Huxley (1872). “Lay Sermons, Addresses, and Reviews”, p.61
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