Adolphe Quetelet Quote

Every social state supposes... a certain number and a certain order of crimes, these being merely the necessary consequences of its organisation. This observation, so discouraging at first sight, becomes, on the contrary, consolatory, when examined more nearly, by showing the possibility of ameliorating the human race, by modifying their institutions, their habits, the amount of their information, and, generally, all which influences their mode of existence.


Introductory - A Treatise on Man and the Development of His Faculties (1842)


Every social state supposes... a certain number and a certain order of crimes, these being merely the necessary consequences of its organisation....

Every social state supposes... a certain number and a certain order of crimes, these being merely the necessary consequences of its organisation....

Every social state supposes... a certain number and a certain order of crimes, these being merely the necessary consequences of its organisation....

Every social state supposes... a certain number and a certain order of crimes, these being merely the necessary consequences of its organisation....