"Liberty is like rich food and strong wine: the strong natures accustomed to them thrive and grow even stronger on them; but they deplete, inebriate an...

To renounce freedom is to renounce one's humanity, one's rights as a man and equally one's duties.
~ Jean-Jacques Rousseau ~












To renounce freedom is to renounce one's humanity, one's rights as a man and equally one's duties.

More Jean-Jacques Rousseau quotes
"Man was born free and everywhere he is in shackles.
"Free people, remember this maxim: we may acquire liberty, but it is never recovered if it is once lost.
"Liberty is like those solid and tasty foods or those full-bodied wines which are appropriate for nourishing and strengthening robust constitutions tha...
"Even the soberest judged it requisite to sacrifice one part of their liberty to ensure the other, as a man, dangerously wounded in any of his limbs, r...
"Political writers argue in regard to the love of liberty with the same philosophy that philosophers do in regard to the state of nature; by the things...
"Such is the pure movement of nature prior to all reflection. Such is the force of natural pity, which the most depraved mores still have difficulty de...
"I have never thought, for my part, that man's freedom consists in his being able to do whatever he wills, but that he should not, by any human power, ...
"To renounce liberty is to renounce being a man, to surrender the rights of humanity and even its duties.
"Liberty may be gained, but can never be recovered." (Bk2:8)