Quotes Library

November 3, 2025

One of the uses of history is to free us from a falsely imagined past. The less we know of how ideas actually took root and grew, the more apt we are to accept them unquestioningly, as inevitable features of the world in which we live.

Robert Bork (1927–2012), American jurist and legal scholar, The Antitrust Paradox (1978), Jay p.53

How well do you know your country’s history—the real history, not the falsely imagined past?

The question for meditation goes to the purpose of studying history. Bork is making a distinction between history as it is imagined—what should really be termed “myth”—rather than history as it unfolded in reality. The motion picture Gone with the Wind is an example of the former, Twelve Years a Slave of the latter.


More Quotes

June 10, 2025
The trouble with the Conservative Party is that it has not turned back the clock a single second.
November 9, 2025
As soon as men decide that all means are permitted to fight an evil, then their good becomes indistinguishable from the evil that they set out to destroy.
January 24, 2025
Victory has a hundred fathers, but defeat is an orphan.
Page 89 of 122