He who places himself in direct opposition to sound human understanding, on the domain of the demonstrable, subjects himself to the curse of ridicule which nothing can withstand.


The Plant: A Biography (1848), Lecture XI, p. 272


He who places himself in direct opposition to sound human understanding, on the domain of the demonstrable, subjects himself to the curse of ridicule ...

He who places himself in direct opposition to sound human understanding, on the domain of the demonstrable, subjects himself to the curse of ridicule ...

He who places himself in direct opposition to sound human understanding, on the domain of the demonstrable, subjects himself to the curse of ridicule ...

He who places himself in direct opposition to sound human understanding, on the domain of the demonstrable, subjects himself to the curse of ridicule ...