"Insolence is not logic; epithets are the arguments of malice"
About this Quote
The second half goes sharper. “Epithets” are name-tags thrown like stones, and Ingersoll frames them as the preferred currency of “malice.” That word matters. He’s not merely condemning sloppy thinking; he’s diagnosing motive. If you reach for slurs, you’re not trying to clarify the truth, you’re trying to injure a person’s standing so their ideas don’t have to be met on the merits. It’s an early, compact critique of ad hominem as a moral failure, not just a logical one.
Context does a lot of work. Ingersoll, a famed 19th-century orator and freethinker as well as a lawyer, spent a career in public controversy where religious and political debates routinely slid into character assassination. The line reads like a self-defense manual for secular argument in a culture that policed dissent with insults. It’s also a warning to any side: once discourse becomes theater for contempt, truth loses on procedure even before it loses on facts.
Quote Details
| Topic | Reason & Logic |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: The Works of Robert G. Ingersoll, Vol. 06 (of 12) (Robert G. Ingersoll, 1900)
Evidence: Insolence is not logic. Epithets are the arguments of malice. (“The Christian Religion” (Rejoinder), line 598 in Project Gutenberg HTML). This exact wording appears in Ingersoll’s “The Christian Religion” material included in the 1900 “Dresden Edition” collected Works (Vol. VI). In the Gutenberg transcription it occurs in the section responding to “Mr. Black’s reply” (Jeremiah S. Black) and is part of a longer paragraph beginning “Kindness is strength...” (lines 597–598). The collected Works volume itself is not the first publication: the table of contents for this volume labels “THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION” as “(1881.)”, indicating the debate text dates to 1881, but I did not locate (within the sources checked) a scan/transcript of the 1881 primary imprint (e.g., North American Review issue(s) or an 1881 standalone pamphlet) with a verifiable page number for the first appearance. So: primary authorial text is confirmed, earliest-date-of-origin is very likely 1881, but the earliest *verifiable* publication instance I can point to from the retrieved primary text is the 1900 collected Works reprint. Other candidates (1) The Essential Works of Robert G. Ingersoll (Robert Green Ingersoll, 2023) compilation90.0% Enriched edition. Champion of Reason: Essays for a Rational, Enlightened World Robert Green Ingersoll Good Press. pul... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Ingersoll, Robert G. (2026, February 13). Insolence is not logic; epithets are the arguments of malice. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/insolence-is-not-logic-epithets-are-the-arguments-163818/
Chicago Style
Ingersoll, Robert G. "Insolence is not logic; epithets are the arguments of malice." FixQuotes. February 13, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/insolence-is-not-logic-epithets-are-the-arguments-163818/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Insolence is not logic; epithets are the arguments of malice." FixQuotes, 13 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/insolence-is-not-logic-epithets-are-the-arguments-163818/. Accessed 28 Mar. 2026.











