Unreasoning prejudices are bred out of the continual living in the past
You know that great prejudice exists against all successful business enterprise - the more successful, the greater the prejudice.
Prejudice is always dangerous.
There is no debt with so much prejudice put off as that of justice.
We have no right to prejudice another in his civil enjoyments because he is of another church.
The only prejudice I've found anywhere in TV is in some advertising agencies, and there isn't so much prejudice as just fear.
The more I see of the world, the more am I dissatisfied with it.
Race prejudice is not only a shadow over the colored it is a shadow over all of us, and the shadow is darkest over those who feel it least and allow its evil effects to go on.
Prejudice is a form of untruthfulness, and untruthfulness is an insidious form of injustice.
Prejudice will fall in a combat with interest.
One thing about prejudices -- once you break one of them, you're screwed, because then they all have got to go.
One difference between a conviction and a prejudice is that a conviction can be explained without getting angry.
Gold has worked down from Alexander's time. . . When something holds good for two thousand years I do not believe it can be so because of prejudice or mistaken theory.
Prejudices of any kind are the destroyers of human happiness & welfare.
As a black person I am no stranger to prejudice. But the truth is that in the political world I have been far more often discriminated against because I am a woman than because I am black.
A jurisdiction thus vague and arbitrary was exposed to the most dangerous abuse: the substance, as well as the form, of justice were often sacrificed to the prejudices of virtue, the bias of laudable affection, and the grosser seductions of interest or resentment.
There are periods of despondency and suffering which take possession of me. But I don't want anything but my own way. That is wanting a good deal, of course, when you have to trample upon the lives, the hearts, the prejudices of others-
Socrates called beauty a short-lived tyranny; Plato, a privilege of nature; Theophrastus, a silent cheat; Theocritus, a delightful prejudice; Carneades, a solitary kingdom; Aristotle, that it was better than all the letters of recommendation in the world; Homer, that it was a glorious gift of nature; and Ovid, that it was favor bestowed by the gods.
I have this prejudice that trilogies are long, three-volume novels.
The stumbling way in which even the ablest of the scientists in every generation have had to fight through thickets of erroneous observations, misleading generalizations, inadequate formulation, and unconscious prejudice is rarely appreciated by those who obtain their scientific knowledge from textbooks.