"Between two groups of people who want to make inconsistent kinds of worlds, I see no remedy but force"
About this Quote
Holmes was a poet, but this is the voice of a hard-nosed moral realist: progress isn’t a gentle unfolding, it’s a collision. The subtext is bracingly anti-sentimental about reason. Debate assumes a common world to debate within. Holmes is saying that sometimes the argument is precisely about what the world is allowed to be, and that kind of fight doesn’t end with better rhetoric. It ends when one side has the power to set the rules of the world everyone else has to inhabit.
Context matters. Holmes lived through a 19th-century America where “inconsistent worlds” weren’t theoretical: abolition and slavery, union and secession, industrial modernity and older social orders. In that environment, “remedy” sounds almost medical - as if force is an unpleasant but necessary surgery to prevent a body politic from dying.
What makes the quote work is its refusal to flatter the reader with civility myths. It’s not a celebration of violence so much as a bleak diagnosis of pluralism’s limits: when foundational visions clash, the final arbitrator isn’t persuasion, it’s power.
Quote Details
| Topic | War |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Sr., Oliver Wendell Holmes. (2026, January 13). Between two groups of people who want to make inconsistent kinds of worlds, I see no remedy but force. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/between-two-groups-of-people-who-want-to-make-1110/
Chicago Style
Sr., Oliver Wendell Holmes. "Between two groups of people who want to make inconsistent kinds of worlds, I see no remedy but force." FixQuotes. January 13, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/between-two-groups-of-people-who-want-to-make-1110/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Between two groups of people who want to make inconsistent kinds of worlds, I see no remedy but force." FixQuotes, 13 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/between-two-groups-of-people-who-want-to-make-1110/. Accessed 25 Feb. 2026.







