George Barclay
– A philosopher from Ireland
Born: 1685 | Death: 1753
Lessons from Great Thinkers George Barclay, a philosopher from Ireland, is known as Bishop Barclay. He strengthened the principles of non-materialism. He said that nothing can be achieved without concept.
- A man who is different from his friends and neighbors cannot be true to others.
- The world is like a board. In which there are many shapes of food. A square person is in a round box and a round person is in a square box.
- A ray of imagination or intelligence can light up the world and continue to shine for centuries.
- I would prefer to be a pig instead of a human because humans are the most stupid and meaningless animal.
- Truth is a struggle for most people, a cry, but for some it is a game.
- To be a good patriot you have to believe the people of your country as God. Before doing any work you have to think that you are responsible to the countrymen.
- First we blow dust and then complain that it doesn’t look clean.
- Religion is the focal point that unites people from different poles of politics.
- A theory that first gives rise to doubt leads to commonsense.
- I doubt my existence just as I doubt everything I see and experience.
- Imagination creates nothing, neither our thoughts, nor energy, nor ideas. Existence is that which the body works to produce.
- If someone says that true and genuine people do not exist in the world, then this is a sure proof that that person is a fraud. Not worthy of trust.