Great Throughts Treasury

This site is dedicated to the memory of Dr. Alan William Smolowe who gave birth to the creation of this database.

Related Quotes

Edmund Burke

It is for the most part in our skill in manners, and in the observation of time and place and of decency in general that what is called taste consists; and which is in reality no other that a more refined judgment. The cause of a wrong taste is a defect of judgment.

Cause | Judgment | Manners | Observation | Reality | Skill | Taste | Time | Wrong |

Edgar Allan Poe

The plots of God are perfect. The Universe is a plot of God.

God | Universe | God |

Elbert Green Hubbard

All noise is waste. So cultivate quietness in your speech, in your thoughts, in your emotions. Speak habitually low. Wait for attention and then your low words will be charged with dynamite.

Attention | Emotions | Noise | Speech | Waste | Will | Words |

Eric Hoffer

Without a sense of proportion there can be neither good taste nor genuine intelligence, nor perhaps moral integrity.

Good | Integrity | Intelligence | Sense | Taste |

François Guizot, fully François Pierre Guillaume Guizot

The study of art is a taste at once engrossing and unselfish, which may be indulged without effort, and yet has the power of exciting the deepest emotions - a taste able to exercise and to gratify both the nobler and softer parts of our nature.

Art | Effort | Emotions | Nature | Power | Study | Taste | Art |

Galileo Galilei, known simply as Galileo

It is rashness to go about to make our shallow reason judge of the works of God, and to call vain and superfluous whatever thing in the Universe is not of use to us.

God | Rashness | Reason | Universe |

George MacDonald

The love of one’s neighbor is the only door out of the dungeon of self. The man thinks his consciousness is himself; whereas his life consists of the inbreathing of God, and the consciousness of the universe of truth.

Consciousness | God | Life | Life | Love | Man | Self | Truth | Universe |

George Gurdjieff, fully George Ivanovich Gurdjieff

The sole means now for the savings of the beings on the planet Earth would be to implant into their presences a new organ with such properties that every one of these unfortunates during the process of existence should constantly sense and be cognizant of the inevitability of his own death as well as the death of everyone upon whom his eyes or attention rests. Only such a sensation and such a cognizance can now destroy the egoism completely crystallized in them that has swallowed up the whole of their Essence and also the tendency to hate others which flows from it - the tendency, namely, which engenders all those mutual relationships existing there, which serve as the chief cause of all their abnormalities unbecoming to three-brained beings and maleficent for them themselves and for the whole Universe.

Attention | Cause | Death | Destroy | Earth | Existence | Hate | Means | Sense | Universe |

Fritjof Capra

Quantum theory has abolished the notion of fundamentally separated objects... It has come to see the universe as an interconnected web of physical and mental relations whose parts are only defined through their connections to the whole.

Universe |

George Bernard Shaw

What I mean by a religious person is one who conceives himself or herself to be the instrument of some purpose in the universe which is a high purpose, and is the motive of evolution - that is, of a continual ascent in organization and power and life, and extension of life.

Evolution | Life | Life | Organization | Power | Purpose | Purpose | Universe |

George Washington Carver

When you can do the common things of life in an uncommon way you will command the attention of the world.

Attention | Life | Life | Will | World |

George Santayana

Friends must desire to live as much as possible together and to share their work, thoughts, and pleasures. Good-fellowship and sensuous affinity are indispensable to give spiritual communion a personal accent; otherwise men would be indifferent vehicles for such thoughts and powers as emanated from them, and attention would not be in any way arrested or refracted by the human medium through which it beheld the good.

Attention | Desire | Good | Indispensable | Men | Work |

George Santayana

My atheism, like that of Spinoza, is true piety towards the universe and denies only gods fashioned by men in their own image, to be servants of their human interests.

Atheism | Men | Piety | Universe |

George Santayana

The notion that there is and can be but one time, and that half of it is always intrinsically past and the other half always intrinsically future, belongs to the normal pathology of an animal mind: it marks the egoistical outlook of an active being endowed with imagination. Such a being will project the moral contrast produced by his momentary absorption in action upon the conditions and history of that action, and upon the universe at large. A perspective of hope and one of reminiscence divide for him a specious eternity; and for him the dramatic centre of existence, though always a different point in physical time, will always be precisely in himself.

Action | Contrast | Eternity | Existence | Future | History | Hope | Imagination | Mind | Past | Time | Universe | Will |

Hans Reichenbach

The picture of scientific method drafted by modern philosophy is very different from traditional conceptions. Gone is the ideal of a universe whose course follows strict rules, a predetermined cosmos that unwinds itself like an unwinding clock. Gone is the ideal of the scientist who knows the absolute truth. The happenings of nature are like rolling dice rather than like revolving stars; they are controlled by probability laws, not by causality, and the scientist resembles a gambler more than a prophet. He can tell you only his best posits - he never knows beforehand whether they will come true. He is a better gambler, though, than the man at the green table, because his statistical methods are superior. And his goal is staked higher - the goal of foretelling the rolling dice of the cosmos.

Absolute | Better | Man | Method | Nature | Philosophy | Truth | Universe | Will |

Henry David Thoreau, born David Henry Thoreau

Live each season as it passes; breath the air, drink the drink, taste the fruit, and resign yourself to the influences of each.

Taste |

Henry David Thoreau, born David Henry Thoreau

Go confidently in the direction of your dreams! Live the life you've imagined. As you simplify your life, the laws of the universe will be simpler.

Dreams | Life | Life | Universe | Will |

Henry David Thoreau, born David Henry Thoreau

I do not value any view of the universe into which man and the institutions of man enter very largely and absorb much of the attention. Man is but the place where I stand, and the prospect hence is infinite.

Attention | Man | Universe | Value |

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

The first pressure of sorrow crushes out from our hearts the best wine; afterwards the constant weight of it brings forth bitterness - the taste and strain from the lees of the vat.

Bitterness | Sorrow | Taste |