QUOTES ON KNOWLEDGE
And this grey spirit
yearning in desire, To follow knowledge like a sinking star, beyond the
utmost bound of human thought.
- "Ulysses", Tennyson
We should take care not
to make the intellect our god; it has, of course, powerful muscles, but
no personality.
- Albert Einstein
Losing an illusion makes
you wiser than finding a truth.
- Ludwig Borne
The greatest obstacle
to discovery is not ignorance: it is the illusion of knowledge.
- Daniel J. Boorstin, historian
The greatest homage
we can pay to truth, is to use it.
- James Russell Lowell
Those who know the
truth are not equal to those who love it.
- Confucius
Art is a lie that tells
the truth.
- Picasso
It is but sorrow to
be wise when wisdom profits not.
- Tiresias, to Oedipus,
by Sophocles
It isn't what they don't
know that hurts people. It's what they do know that isn't so.
- Mark Twain
Daring ideas are like
chessmen moved forward; they may be beaten, but they may start a winning
game.
- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Without execution,
thinking is mere idleness.
- Winston Churchill
A mind once stretched
by a new idea never regains its original dimensions.
- Oliver Wendell
Holmes
All things are ready,
if our minds be so.
- William Shakespeare,
Henry V
If we read of one man
robbed, or murdered, or killed by accident, or one house burned, or one
vessel wrecked, or one steamboat blown up, or one cow run over on the Western
railroad, or one mad dog killed, or one lot of grasshoppers in the winter
— we need never read of another. One is enough. If you are acquainted with
the principle, what do you care for a myriad of instances and applications?
- Thoreau, "Walden"
"When people think seriously,
they think abstractly; they conjure up simplified pictures of reality called
concepts, theories, models, paradigms. Without such intellectual constructs,
there is, William James said, only 'a bloomin' buzzin' confusion.'"
- Samuel Huntington, responding to critcism of his "Clash of Civilizations"
It is only possible
to succeed at second-rate pursuits—like becoming a millionaire or a prime
minister, winning a war, seducing beautiful women, flying thought the stratosphere
or landing on the moon. First-rate pursuits — involving, as they must,
trying to understand what life is about and trying to convey that understanding
— inevitably result in a sense of failure. A Napoleon, a Churchill, a Roosevelt
can feel themselves to be successful, but never a Socrates, a Pascal, a
Blake. Understanding is for ever unattainable. Therein lies the inevitablility
of failure in embarking upon its quest, which is none the less the only
one worthy of serious attention.
- Malcolm Muggeridge
Tis better to remain
silent and be thought a fool, than open one's mouth and remove all doubt.
-Samuel Johnson
Do not speak unless you
can improve on silence
~ Buddhist proverb
From listening comes wisdom
and from speaking repentance.
- Anon
He who asks is a fool
for five minutes, but he who does not ask remains a fool forever.
- Chinese proverb
I was gratified to be
able to answer promptly, and I did. I said I didn't know.
- Mark Twain
I don't want any "yes-men"
around me. I want everybody to tell me the truth even if it costs them
their jobs.
-Samuel Goldwyn
The most dangerous silence
is noise; noise keeps us from hearing what we need to hear or from speaking
what we need to speak.
- Armin Wiebe, "Hearing the Real Guns Go Off"
The wise many things
from their enemies.
- Aristophanes, Birds
(414 BC)
Men of sense often learn
from their enemies. It is from their foes, not their friends, that cities
learn the lesson of building high walls and ships of war....
- Aristophanes
A wise man gets more use
from his enemies than a fool from his friends.
- Baltasar Gracian
Minds, like parachutes,
work only when open.
- Sir James Dewar,
Scottish scientist, 1877-1923
The trouble with having
an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and
trying to put things in it.
- Diggers, "Terry
Pratchett"
If you keep your mind
sufficiently open, people will throw a lot of rubbish into it.
- William A. Orton
Has it ever occurred
to you that there might be a difference between having an open mind and
having holes in one's head?
- Richard Schultz
Those who say they
dislike dogma, or 'certainty', tend to be liars, hypocrites, or simply
wrong. What they really dislike is the dogma of those they disagree with.
A society that was certain, certain beyond all certainty, that putting
its citizens in death camps was wrong, would never put people in death
camps. Such things are only possible when you're open to new ideas.
- Jonah Goldberg, "An open mind is a dangerous thing" for "National Review"
What men really want
is not knowledge but certainty.
- Bertrand Russell
There are two ways
to slide easily through life; to believe everything, or to doubt everything.
Both ways save us from thinking.
- Alfred Korzybski
Once we are destined
to live out our lives in the prison of our mind, our one duty is to furnish
it well.
- Peter Ustinov
If your professor wrote
it, it's as near to the truth as you ever need to get.
- John Watson, University of Canterbury
What makes information
a powerful tool is that others don't have it.
- Anon
"Not everything that
counts can be measured. Not everything that can be measured counts."
- Albert Einstein (attributed)
A man's feet should
be planted in his country, but his eyes should survey the world.
- George Santayana
The Earth is the Cradle
of the Mind : but one cannot remain in the cradle forever.
- Konstantin E. Tsiolkovsky
( Pioneer Of Space Flight )
"Where my thoughts are,
I am, in truth."
- Henry Ash in "Possession"
Questions are a burden
to others, answers a prison for oneself.
- An alternative
view from "The Prisoner"
A little learning is a
dangerous thing, but a lot of ignorance is just as bad.
- Bob Edwards
Three passions, simple
but overwhelmingly strong, have governed my life: the longing for love,
the search for knowledge, and unbearable pity for the suffering of mankind.
-Bertrand Russell
Try to learn something
about everything and everything about something.
- T.H. Huxley
The eye sees what it brings
the power to see
- Thomas Carlyle
Sit down before fact as
a little child, be prepared to give up every preconceived notion,follow
humbly wherever and to whatever abysses nature leads, or you shall learn
nothing.
- Thomas Huxley
A new idea is delicate.
It can be killed by a sneer or a yawn; it can be stabbed to death by a
joke or worried to death by a frown on the right person's brow.
- Charles Brower
You are only as wise as
others perceive you to be
- Anon
Be wiser than other people
if you can; but do not tell them so.
- Lord Chesterfield
Where is the wisdom we
have lost in knowledge?
Where is the knowledge
we have lost in information?
- TS Eliot, "Choruses from The Rock"
Iron rusts from disuse,
stagnant water loses its purity, and in cold weather becomes frozen, even
so does inaction sap the vigor of the mind.
- Leonardo Da Vinci
It is one thing to
show a man that he is in error, and another to put him in possession of
truth.
- John Locke
#
Wonder is the beginning
of wisdom.
- Greek Proverb
The most beautiful thing
we can experience is the mysterious.
- Albert Einstein
Wonder... and not any
expectation of advantage from its discoveries, is the first principle which
prompts mankind to the study of Philosophy, of that science which pretends
to lay open the concealed connections that unite the various appearances
of nature.
- Adam Smith, "The
History of Astronomy", (1795)
When you make the finding
yourself - even if you're the last person on Earth to see the light - you'll
never forget it.
I would rather live in
a world where my life is surrounded by mystery than live in a world so
small that my mind could comprehend it.
- Henry Emerson Fosdick
Our universe is a sorry
little affair unless it has something for every age to investigate. Nature
does not reveal her mysteries once and for all.
- Seneca, "Natural
Questions", first century
There ought not to be
anything in the whole universe that man can't poke his nose into - that's
the way we're built and I assume there's some reason for it.
- Robert A. Heinlein,
"Methuselah's Children"
If we are unwilling to
be aware of the dark, we cannot see the light.
- John Cowan
Some mysteries are meant
to be unsolved.
- Dana Scully, "The
X-Files"
The larger the island
of knowledge, the longer the shoreline of wonder.
- Ralph W. Sockman
He who wonders discovers
that this in itself is wonder.
- M.C. Escher
I do not know what I may
appear to the world; but to myself I seem to have been only like a boy
playing on the sea-shore, and diverting myself in now and then finding
a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean
of truth lay all undiscovered before me.
- Isaac Newton
The most beautiful thing
we can experience is the mysterious. It is the source of all true art and
science. He to whom this emotion is a stranger, who can no longer pause
to wonder and stand rapt in awe, is as good as dead: his eyes are closed.
- Einstein
As long as the brain is
a mystery, the universe will also be a mystery.
- Santiago Rammn
y Cajal
The eternal mystery of
the world is its comprehensibility.
- Albert Einstein
#
Education is not the
filling of a bucket, but the lighting of a fire.
- W.B. Yeats
There is no great concurrence
between learning and wisdom.
- Francis Bacon
Without education we are
in a horrible and deadly danger of taking educated people seriously.
- GK Chesterton
The central task of education
is to implant a will and facility for learning; it should produce not learned
but learning people. The truly human society is a learning society, where
grandparents, parents, and children are students together.
- Eric Hoffer
To educate the intelligence
is to expand the horizon of its wants and desires.
- James Russell Lowell
True scholarship consists
in knowing not what things exist, but what they mean; it is not memory
but judgment.
- James Russell Lowell
We need education in
the obvious more than investigation of the obscure.
- Oliver Wendell Holmes
Education is learning
what you didn't even know you didn't know.
- Daniel J Boorstin (attributed)
"A general State education
is a mere contrivance for molding people to be exactly like one another;
and as the mold in which it casts them is that which pleases the dominant
power in the government, whether this be a monarch, an aristocracy, or
a majority of the existing generation; in proportion as it is efficient
and successful, it establishes a despotism over the mind, leading by a
natural tendency to one over the body."
- John Stuart Mill,
"On Liberty" (1859)
The only purpose of education
is to teach a student how to live his life - by developing his mind and
equipping him to deal with reality. The training he needs is theoretical,
i.e., conceptual. He has to be taught to think, to understand, to integrate,
to prove. He has to be taught the essentials of the knowledge discovered
in the past and he has to be equipped to acquire further knowledge by his
own effort.
- Ayn Rand, "The
Anti-Industrial Revolution"
Education rears disciples,
imitators, and routinists, not pioneers of new ideas and creative geniuses.
The schools are not nurseries of progress and improvement, but conservatories
of tradition and unvarying modes of thought.
- Ludwig Von Mises
Men are born ignorant,
not stupid; they are made stupid by education.
- Bertrand Russell
A child educated only
at school is an uneducated child.
- George Santayana
The best academy: a
mother's knee.
- James Russell Lowell
One thorn of experience
is worth a whole wilderness of warning.
- James Russell Lowell
Bodily exercise, when
compulsory, does no harm to the body; but knowledge which is acquired under
compulsion obtains no hold on the mind.
- Plato, The Republic.
Book VII. 536
There are men that teach
best by not teaching at all.
- Abraham Flexner,
quoted in Ed Regis, "Who got Einstein's office?"
I sometimes, in my sprightly
moments, consider myself, in my great chair at school, as some dictator
at the head of a commonwealth. In this little state I can discover all
the great geniuses, all the surprising actions and revolutions of the great
world in miniature. I have several renowned generals but three feet high,
and several deep-projecting politicians in petticoats. I have others catching
and dissecting flies, accumulating remarkable pebbles, cockleshells, etc.,
with as ardent curiosity as any virtuoso in the Royal Society...
- John Adams, Second US President, on his time as a teacher
#
If you can't explain
something to a six-year-old, you really don't understand it yourself.
- Albert Einstein
The process of learning
requires not only hearing and applying but also forgetting and then remembering
again.
- John Gray, Men
Are From Mars, Women Are From Venus
A little inaccuracy sometimes
saves a ton of explanation.
- Saki
When people think seriously,
they think abstractly; they conjure up simplified pictures of reality called
concepts, theories, models, paradigms. Without such intellectual constructs,
there is, William James said, only 'a bloomin' buzzin' confusion.'
- Samuel Huntington
There is no expedient
to which a man will not go to avoid the labor of thinking.
- Thomas Edison
We should be careful to
get out of an experience only the wisdom that is in it and stop there;
lest we be like the cat that sits down on a hot stove-lid. She will never
sit down on a hot stove-lid again and that is well; but also she will never
sit down on a cold one anymore.
- Mark Twain
Example is a dangerous
lure: where the wasp got through the gnat sticks fast.
- Jean de la Fontaine, "Fables"
Wisdom is not about
what you know, but how you know it. If knowledge is a measure of
the grasp an individual has of a given subject, wisdom is a measure of
his grip. Does he hold his ideas lightly or loosely? Will he let
go when they show signs of wear or inappropriateness?
- Andrew Hargadon, Harvard Business School
Wisdom is probably
the ability to cope. That's why someone who has to walk seven miles every
day to get water for their children can be wiser than someone sitting behind
a desk in Wall Street.
- Stephen Fry
How can I tell you
what I think until I've heard what I'm going to say?
- Stephen Fry
Only those who will
risk going too far can possibly find out how far one can go.
- TS Eliot
If we knew what it was
we were doing, it would not be called research, would it?
-Albert Einstein
Everything you've learned
in school as "obvious" becomes less and less obvious as you begin to study
the universe. For example, there are no solids in the universe. There's
not even a suggestion of a solid. There are no absolute continuums. There
are no surfaces. There are no straight lines.
- R. Buckminster
Fuller
They're all so highly
educated, you know. Education is a great shield against experience. It
offers so much, ready-made and all from the best shops, that there's a
temptation to miss your own life in pursuing the lives of your betters.
It makes you wise in some ways, but it can make you a blindfolded fool
in others.
- Robertson Davies,
"World Of Wonders"
"New opinions are always
suspected, and usually opposed, without any other reason but because they
are not already common."
"Reading furnishes
the mind only with materials for knowledge; it is thinking that makes what
we read ours."
- John Locke
There are two kinds of
researchers : those that have implemented something and those that have
not. The latter will tell you that there are 142 ways of doing things and
that there isn't consensus on which is best.The former will simply tell
you that 141 of them don't work.
- David Cheriton
Examinations are formidable
even to the best prepared, for the greatest fool may ask more than the
wisest man can answer.
- Charles Caleb Colton,
"Lacon"
A man who has never gone
to school may steal from a freight car, but if he has a university education
he may steal the whole railroad.
- Franklin Delano
Roosevelt
Anyone can make the simple
complicated. Creativity is making the complicated simple.
- Charles Mingus
Education is what survives
when what has been learned has been forgotten.
- B. F. Skinner,
in New Scientist
One science only will
one genius fit: So vast is art, so narrow human wit.
A little learning is
a dangerous thing; drink deep, or taste not the Pierian spring: There shallow
draughts intoxicate the brain, and drinking largely sobers us again.
Words are like leaves;
and where they most abound, much fruit of sense beneath is rarely found.
- Alexander Pope,
"Epistle III"
#
He that studies books
alone will know how things ought to be; and he who studies men will know
how they are.
- Charles Caleb Colton,
1829
Book - Learning : The
dunce's derisive term for all knowledge that transcends his own impertinent
ignorance.
- Ambrose Bierce
Employ your time in improving
yourself by other men's writings, so that you shall gain easily what others
have labored hard for.
- Socrates
Nine-tenths of existing
books are nonsense, and the clever books are the refutation of that nonsense.
To know only one thing
well is to have a barbaric mind: civilization implies the graceful relation
of all varieties of experience to a central humane system of thought. The
present age is peculiarly barbaric: introduce, say, a Hebrew scholar to
an ichthyologist or an authority on Danish place names and the pair of
them would have no single topic in common but the weather or the war (if
there happened to be a war in progress, which is usual in this barbaric
age).
- Robert Graves
I said I liked being half-educated;
you were so much more surprised at everything when you were ignorant.
- Gerald Durrell,
"My Family and Other Animals"
The stupidity of a stupid
man is mercifully intimate and reticient, while the stupidity of an intellectual
is cried from the rooftops.
- Peter Ustinov,
"Dear Me"
If I have seen further,
it is by standing on the shoulders of giants.
- Isaac Newton
If I have not seen farther,
it is because giants were standing on my shoulders.
- Anonymous
"A philosophy major? Now,
what can you do with a philosophy major?"
"You can think deep
thoughts about being unemployed."
- Dragon, "The Bruce
Lee Story"
Those of you who think
that you know everything are particularly annoying to those of us who do.
- Anon
Some people will never
learn anything, for this reason, because they understand everything too
soon.
-Alexander Pope
The more refined one is,
the more unhappy.
- Anton Chekhov
There is nobody so irritating
as somebody with less intelligence and more sense than we have.
-Don Herold
So, rather than appear
foolish afterward, I renounce seeming clever now.
-William of Baskerville,
"The Name of the Rose"
Beware of one who works
hard to learn something, learns it, and finds themself no wiser than before.
They are full of murderous resentment of people who are ignorant without
having come by their ignorance the hard way.
- Sir John A. MacDonald,
Canada's first prime minister
A man with a watch knows
what time it is. A man with two watches is never sure.
- Segal's Law
Strange how much you have
to know before you know how little you know.
- Anon
One of the greatest pieces
of economic wisdom is to know what you do not know.
- John Kenneth Galbraith
The fool doth think he
is wise, but the wise man knows himself to be a fool.
- William Shakespeare,
"As You Like It"
The principle is so perfectly
general that no particular application of it is possible.
- George Polya
#
The truth and the facts
aren’t necessarily the same thing. Telling the truth is the object of all
art; facts are what the unimaginative have instead of ideas.
- AA Gill, "The London Times"
The truth isn't just
the facts. You can have all the facts imaginable and miss the truth, just
as you can have facts missing or some wrong, and reach the larger truth.
- David McCullough
"Facts are stubborn
things and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictums
of our passions, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence."
- John Adams, from his defence of British soldiers accused of the Boston
'massacre'
Yu, shall I tell you
what knowledge is? When you know a thing, say that you know it. When you
do not know a thing, admit you do not know it. This is knowledge.
- K'ung-fu Tzu.
Knowledge is of two kinds.
We know a subject ourselves, or we know where we can find information on
it.
- Samuel Johnson
The mark of an educated
man is not in his boast that he has built his mountain of facts and has
stood on top of it, but in his admission that there may be other peaks
in the same range with men on top of them, and that, though their views
of the landscape may be different from his, they are none the less legitimate.
- E.J. Pratt
A stupid man never learns
from his mistakes. A smart man always learns from his mistakes. A wise
man learns from other peoples mistakes.
- hayes@ug.cs.dal.ca
"It is necessary for
us to learn from others' mistakes. You will not live long enough to make
them all yourself."
- Hyman Rickover
A smart man learns
from his mistakes. A really smart man makes sure others are forced to learn
from his mistakes.
- Liam Fay
The mediocre teacher
tells. The good teacher explains. The superior teacher demonstrates. The
great teacher inspires.
- William A. Ward
If you would thoroughly
know anything, teach it to others.
- Tryon Edwards
"You are wise, father."
"It is the difference
between knowledge and experience."
- Lal & Data, "The Offspring", Star Trek TNG
It is the province
of knowledge to speak and it is the privilege of wisdom to listen.
- Oliver Wendell
Holmes
Nothing doth more hurt
in a state than that cunning men pass for wise.
- Francis Bacon,
Essays
Cunning is the art of
concealing our own defects, and discovering other people's weaknesses.
- William Hazlitt
Intelligence is quickness
to apprehend as distinct from ability, which is capacity to act wisely
on the thing apprehended.
- Alfred Whitehead
An intellectual is someone
whose mind watches itself.
- Albert Camus
It is the mark of an educated
mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it.
- Aristotle
#
It is well to observe
the force and virtue and consequence of discoveries, and these are to be
seen nowhere more conspicuously than in those three which were unknown
to the ancients, and of which the origin, though recent, is obscure and
inglorious; namely, printing, gunpowder and the magnet. For these three
have changed the whole face and state of things throughout the world.
If a man begins with
certainties, he shall end in doubts, but if he will be content to begin
with doubts, he shall end in certainties.
- Sir Francis Bacon,
"The Advancement of Learning"
At first people refuse
to believe that a strange new thing can be done, then they begin to hope
it can be done, then they see it can be done - then it is done and all
the world wonders why it was not done centuries ago.
- Frances H. Burnett
1500 years ago, everyone
knew that the sun revolved around the earth. 500 years ago, everyone knew
the world was flat. Yesterday you knew that we were alone on this planet.
Imagine what you'll learn tomorrow.
- Men in Black
Necessity is the mother
of invention.
- Greek Proverb
Neccesity is the mother
of invention, it is true -- but it's father is creativity, and knowledge
is the midwife.
- Jonathan Schattke
Necessity is the mother
of invention" is a silly proverb. "Necessity is the mother of futile dodges"
is much closer to the truth. The basis of growth of modern invention is
science, and science is almost wholly the outgrowth of pleasurable intellectual
curiosity.
- Alfred N. Whitehead
#
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