Either one lives 'for' politics or one lives 'off' politics.

Max Weber
Some Similar Quotes
  1. Do not ask your childrento strive for extraordinary lives. Such striving may seem admirable, but it is the way of foolishness. Help them instead to find the wonderand the marvel of an ordinary life. Show them the joy of tastingtomatoes, apples and pears. <span style="margin:15px;... - William Martin

  2. Life is partly what we make it, and partly what it is made by the friends we choose. - Tehyi Hsieh

  3. A complete stranger has the capacity to alter the life of another irrevocably. This domino effect has the capacity to change the course of an entire world. That is what life is; a chain reaction of individuals colliding with others and influencing their lives without... - J.D. Stroube

  4. The people I distrust most are those who want to improve our lives but have only one course of action. - Frank Herbert

  5. When people support you when you have done something wrong. It doesnt mean you are right, but it means those people are promoting their hate , bad behavior or living their bad lives through you. - Unknown

More Quotes By Max Weber
  1. The intellect, like all cultural values, has created an aristocracy based on the possession of rational culture and independent of all personal ethical qualities of man. The aristocracy of intellect is hence an unbrotherly aristocracy.

  2. Weber, ... argues that... personal bias should not preclude the scientific ascertainment of objective historical facts.

  3. Tolstoi has given the simplest answer, with the words: ‘Science is meaningless because it gives no answer to our question, the only question important for us: "What shall we do and how shall we live?"' That science does not give an answer to this is...

  4. Politics is a strong and slow boring of hard boards. It takes both passion and perspective. Certainly all historical experience confirms the truth - that man would not have attained the possible unless time and again he had reached out for the impossible. But to...

  5. The final result of political action often, no regularly, stands in completely inadequate and often even paradoxical relation to its original meaning.

Related Topics