An Essay on the Principle of Population - Vol. 1 Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
An Essay on the Principle of Population - Vol. 1 An Essay on the Principle of Population - Vol. 1 by Thomas Robert Malthus
8 ratings, 3.00 average rating, 2 reviews
An Essay on the Principle of Population - Vol. 1 Quotes Showing 1-2 of 2
“In all our feeble attempts, however, to ‘find out the Almighty to perfection’, it seems absolutely necessary that we should reason from nature up to nature’s God and not presume to reason from God to nature. The moment we allow ourselves to ask why some things are not otherwise, instead of endeavouring to account for them as they are, we shall never know where to stop, we shall be led into the grossest and most childish absurdities, all progress in the knowledge of the ways of Providence must necessarily be at an end, and the study will even cease to be an improving exercise of the human mind.”
Thomas Robert Malthus, An Essay on the Principle of Population - Vol. 1
“It is the lot of man, that he will frequently have to choose between two evils; and it is a sufficient reason for the adoption of any institution, that it is the best mode that suggests itself of preventing greater evils. A continual endeavour should undoubtedly prevail to make these institutions as perfect as the nature of them will admit. But nothing is so easy as to find fault with human institutions; nothing so difficult as to suggest adequate practical improvements. It is to be lamented, that more men of talents employ their time in the former occupation than in the latter.”
Thomas Robert Malthus, An Essay on the Principle of Population - Vol. 1