WALTER LIPPMANN QUOTES III

American writer, reporter & political commentator (1889-1974)

The radical novelty of modern science lies precisely in the rejection of the belief, which is at the heart of all popular religion, that the forces which move the stars and atoms are contingent upon the preferences of the human heart.

WALTER LIPPMANN

A Preface to Morals

Tags: science


That is what kills political writing, this absurd pretense that you are delivering a great utterance. You never do. You are just a puzzled man making notes about what you think. You are not building the Pantheon.

WALTER LIPPMANN

"Taking a Chance", Force and Ideas: The Early Writings


Where love exists with self-respect and joy, where a fine environment is provided for the child, where the parents live under conditions that neither stunt the imagination nor let it run to uncontrolled fantasy, there you have the family that modern men are seeking to create.

WALTER LIPPMANN

Drift and Mastery: An Attempt to Diagnose the Current Unrest

Tags: family


Without some form of censorship, propaganda in the strict sense of the word is impossible. In order to conduct a propaganda there must be some barrier between the public and the event. Access to the real environment must be limited, before anyone can create a pseudo-environment that he thinks wise or desirable.

WALTER LIPPMANN

Public Opinion

Tags: propaganda


Though it is disguised by the illusion that a bureaucracy accountable to a majority of voters, and susceptible to the pressure of organized minorities, is not exercising compulsion, it is evident that the more varied and comprehensive the regulation becomes, the more the state becomes a despotic power as against the individual. For the fragment of control over the government which he exercises through his vote is in no effective sense proportionate to the authority exercised over him by the government.

WALTER LIPPMANN

Good Society

Tags: government


There is nothing disastrous in the temporary nature of our ideas. They are always that. But there may very easily be a train of evil in the self-deception which regards them as final. I think God will forgive us our skepticism sooner than our Inquisitions.

WALTER LIPPMANN

A Preface to Politics


The size of a man's income has considerable effect on his access to the world beyond his neighborhood. With money he can overcome almost every tangible obstacle of communication, he can travel, buy books and periodicals, and bring within the range of his attention almost any known fact of the world.

WALTER LIPPMANN

Public Opinion

Tags: money


The people who really matter in social affairs are neither those who wish to stop short like a mule, or leap from crag to crag like a mountain goat.

WALTER LIPPMANN

Drift and Mastery: An Attempt to Diagnose the Current Unrest


The balancing of present wants against the future is really the central problem of ethics.

WALTER LIPPMANN

Drift and Mastery: An Attempt to Diagnose the Current Unrest


Most men, after a little freedom, have preferred authority with the consoling assurances and the economy of effort it brings.

WALTER LIPPMANN

A Preface to Morals

Tags: authority


Ignore what a man desires and you ignore the very source of his power.

WALTER LIPPMANN

A Preface to Politics

Tags: desire


Between ourselves and our real natures we interpose that wax figure of idealizations and selections which we call our character. We extend this into all our thinking. Between us and the realities of social life we build up a mass of generalizations, abstract ideas, ancient glories, and personal wishes. They simplify and soften experience. It is so much easier to talk of poverty than to think of the poor, to argue the rights of capital than to see its results. Pretty soon we come to think of the theories and abstract ideas as things in themselves. We worry about their fate and forget their original content.

WALTER LIPPMANN

A Preface to Politics

Tags: character


Whether or not birth control is eugenic, hygienic, and economic, it is the most revolutionary practice in the history of sexual morals.

WALTER LIPPMANN

A Preface to Morals

Tags: birth control


When distant and unfamiliar and complex things are communicated to great masses of people, the truth suffers a considerable and often a radical distortion. The complex is made over into the simple, the hypothetical into the dogmatic, and the relative into an absolute.

WALTER LIPPMANN

The Public Philosophy


Unless our ideas are questioned, they become part of the furniture of eternity.

WALTER LIPPMANN

The Stakes of Diplomacy


Ours is a problem in which deception has become organized and strong; where truth is poisoned at its source; one in which the skill of the shrewdest brains is devoted to misleading a bewildered people.

WALTER LIPPMANN

A Preface to Politics

Tags: deception


Men command fewer words than they have ideas to express, and language, as Jean Paul said, is a dictionary of faded metaphors.

WALTER LIPPMANN

Public Opinion

Tags: words


It seems like topsy-turvyland to make reason serve the irrational. Yet that is just what it has always done, and ought always to do.

WALTER LIPPMANN

A Preface to Politics

Tags: reason


All men desire their own perfect adjustment, but they desire it, being finite men, on their own terms.

WALTER LIPPMANN

The Phantom Public


Where there is no danger of overt action there is rarely any interference with freedom. That is why there has so often been amazing freedom of opinion within an aristocratic class which at the same time sanctioned the ruthless suppression of heterodox opinion among the common people. When the Inquisition was operating most effectively against the bourgeois who had lapsed into heresy, the princes of the Church and the nobles enjoyed the freedom of the Renaissance.

WALTER LIPPMANN

Men of Destiny

Tags: freedom