Top 13 Quotes & Sayings by Moses Finley

Explore popular quotes and sayings by Moses Finley.
Last updated on April 15, 2025.
Moses Finley

Sir Moses Israel Finley, FBA was an American-born British academic and classical scholar. His prosecution by the United States Senate Subcommittee on Internal Security during the 1950s, resulted in his relocation to England, where he became an English classical scholar and eventually master of Darwin College, Cambridge. His most notable publication is The Ancient Economy (1973) in which he argued that the economy in antiquity was governed by status and civic ideology, rather than rational economic motivations.

May 20, 1912 - June 23, 1986
Faction is the greatest evil and the most common danger. "Faction" is the conventional English translation of the Greek stasis, one of the most remarkable words to be found in any language.
man is by nature designed to live in the polis, the highest form of koinonia, community; that is man's end or goal if he achieves the full potentiality of his nature.
Knowledge for its own sake was meaningless, its mere accumulation a waste of time. Knowledge must lead to understanding. — © Moses Finley
Knowledge for its own sake was meaningless, its mere accumulation a waste of time. Knowledge must lead to understanding.
It is a mark of civilised man that he seeks to understand his traditions, and to criticise them, not to swallow them whole.
In the western world today everyone is a democrat.
Historical explanation is not identical with moral judgment.
Political leaders, lacking documents that could be kept secret (apart from the occasional exception), lacking media they could control, were of necessity brought into a direct and immediate relationship with their constituents, and therefore under more and direct and immediate control.
Perhaps the best known, and certainly the most vaunted, "discovery" of modern public opinion research is the indifference and ignorance of a majority of the electorate in western democracies.
What I am arguing, in effect, is that the full democratic system of the second half of the fifth century B.C. would not have been introduced had there been no Athenian empire.
If I had to choose one which best characterized the condition of being a political leader in Athens, the word would be "tension".
A genuinely political society, in which discussion and debate are an essential technique, is a society full of risks.
We must consider not only why the classical theory of democracy appears to be in contradiction with the observed practice, but also why the many different responses to this observation, though mutually incompatible, all share the belief that democracy is the best form of political organization.
Ideal goals are a menace in themselves, as much in more modern philosophers as in Plato.
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