Best 6 quotes of Thomas Robert Malthus on MyQuotes

Thomas Robert Malthus

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    Thomas Robert Malthus

    as long as a great number of those impressions which form character, like the nice motions of the arm, remain absolutely independent of the will of man, though it would be the height of folly and presumption to attempt to calculate the relative proportions of virtue and vice at the future periods of the world, it may be safely asserted that the vices and moral weakness of mankind, taken in the mass, are invincible.

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    Thomas Robert Malthus

    El obrero que se casa sin poder mantener a su familia puede ser considerado, en cierta medida, como enemigo de todos sus compaƱeros.

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    Thomas Robert Malthus

    It may be said with truth that man is always susceptible of improvement

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    Thomas Robert Malthus

    The lower classes of people in Europe may at some future period be much better instructed than they are at present; they may be taught to employ the little spare time they have in many better ways than at the ale-house; they may live under better and more equal laws than they have ever hitherto done, perhaps, in any country; and I even conceive it possible, though not probable that they may have more leisure; but it is not in the nature of things that they can be awarded such a quantity of money or subsistence as will allow them all to marry early, in the full confidence that they shall be able to provide with ease for a numerous family.

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    Thomas Robert Malthus

    The real perfectibility of man may be illustrated, as I have mentioned before, by the perfectibility of a plant. The object of the enterprising florist is, as I conceive, to unite size, symmetry, and beauty of colour. It would surely be presumptuous in the most successful improver to affirm, that he possessed a carnation in which these qualities existed in the greatest possible state of perfection. However beautiful his flower may be, other care, other soil, or other suns, might produce one still more beautiful.

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    Thomas Robert Malthus

    The vices and moral weakness of man are not invincible: Man is perfectible, or in other words, susceptible of perpetual improvement.