To think for oneself is not only, as Gide said, counterrevolutionary but also apostasy and, at certain times, treason.


Entry (1953) - Eric Hoffer and the Art of the Notebook (2005)


To think for oneself is not only, as Gide said, counterrevolutionary but also apostasy and, at certain times, treason.

To think for oneself is not only, as Gide said, counterrevolutionary but also apostasy and, at certain times, treason.

To think for oneself is not only, as Gide said, counterrevolutionary but also apostasy and, at certain times, treason.

To think for oneself is not only, as Gide said, counterrevolutionary but also apostasy and, at certain times, treason.