We should like to have some towering geniuses to reveal us to ourselves in colour and fire but of course they would have to fit into the pattern of our society and be able to take orders from sound administrative types.
This could never be a crime in any society which deems himself enlightened.
When you look at where the real problems are among minorities in our society particularly blacks it's at the bottom. It's the people who are in school systems that don't educate neighborhoods where there is a lot of crime drugs the whole bit.
But the development of human society does not go straight forward and the epic process will therefore be a recurring process the series a recurring series - though not in exact repetition.
There are few better measures of the concern a society has for its individual members and its own well being than the way it handles criminals.
In the 18th century James Hargreaves invented the Spinning Jenny and Richard Arkwright pioneered the water-propelled spinning frame which led to the mass production of cotton. This was truly revolutionary. The cotton manufacturers created a whole new class of people - the urban proletariat. The structure of society itself would never be the same.
The first sign of corruption in a society that is still alive is that the end justifies the means.
You just let your lower self go and then it takes on all these aspects of the society - the city with horns blowing the people yelling things at each other and the all-in-all violence and chaos of the city. Put that on stage with music and that's what this is.
We don't need sugar to live and we don't need it as a society.
We have a society in which one of the greatest things you can do is a platform to see victim status and one of the qualifications for that is that you have these exquisitely tender feelings about things and sensibilities which are easily offended.
I think the debate in our society now is that people have to agree on zero-tolerance to terrorism.
I started out in engineering. I was a geophysical engineer. Throughout the course of my life I've done a lot of strange jobs and the effect has been to make me think a little more skeptically about our capitalist society.
I for one would think both about how far we have come as a country and how much further we need to go to erase racism and discrimination from our society.
Something's happened in our society which I don't think is beneficial and that's that you see the public being fed box-office news. Newscasts now every local station - I've been traveling around the country a lot and you see the local news and they give box-office reports.
Our whole society is instantaneous.
Possibly because I grew up not feeling very confident about my own physical appearance I developed internal devices so that I could integrate into society.
But the truth of the matter is we're an open society we want to remain an open society and there will continue to be vulnerability. That's why we have to meet the threats when they are not yet taking place on our territory and on our soil.
The negative side of football. The negative side of our society. People sometimes go to football and bring to it the negative aspects of our society.
Divorced from the cosmos from nature from society and from each other we have become fractured and fragmented.
In the past human society provided encouragement and opportunity for people to extend support to each other especially in highly stressful situations.
What does Burma have to give the United States? We can give you the opportunity to engage with people who are ready and willing to change a society.
Society has to change but the political powers we have at the moment are not enough to effect this change. The whole democratic system would have to be rethought.
As I get older I think contrary to modern assumption but in line with the old Lerner and Lowe song that it would actually benefit both them and society if - to quote Professor Higgins - a woman could be more like a man.
It's very hard to imagine the phrase 'consumer society' used so cheerfully and interpreted so enthusiastically in England.
He who wants to persuade should put his trust not in the right argument but in the right word. The power of sound has always been greater than the power of sense.