Guinness wrote frequently for Harper's Bazaar, most famously asserting, in the magazine's July, 1963, issue: "Elegance is in the brain as well as the body and in the soul.
God, he famously asserted, does not play dice.
He famously asserted that the concept of natural rights was "nonsense upon stilts".
President John Quincy Adams's July 4 speech from 1821 famously asserts that "America does not go abroad in search of monsters to destroy."
He famously asserted (1981) that theory must "Always historicize!"
James famously asserts in his work "Radical Empiricism" that clear distinctions of type and category are a constant but unwritten goal of scientific reasoning, so that when they are discovered, success is declared.
Martin Gardner famously asserted that this identity was exact in a 1975 April Fools' hoax in Scientific American; in fact the value is 262537412640768743.99999999999925007259...
He famously asserted, "The buck stops here," arguing that the White House staff, and not the president, was responsible for fateful decisions that might prove embarrassing.
He famously asserted that "creative destruction is the essential fact about capitalism."
Harvey famously asserted, for example, that ex ovo omnia-all animals come from eggs.