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

William George Jordan

Happiness is the greatest paradox in nature. It can grow in any soil, live under any condition. It defies environment. The reason for this is that it does not come from without but from within. Whenever you see a person seeking happiness outside himself, you can be sure he has never found it.

Nature | Paradox | Reason | Wisdom | Happiness |

Gottfried Leibniz, fully Gottfried Wilhalm von Leibniz, Baron von Leibnitz

As there is an infinite number of possible universes in the ideas of God, and as only one can exist, there must be sufficient reason for God’s choice, to determine him to one rather than to another. And this reason can only be found in the fitness, or in the degrees of perfection, which these worlds contain.

Choice | God | Ideas | Perfection | Reason | Wisdom |

Eugène Marin Labiche

Men become attached to us not by reason of the services we render them, but by reason of the services they render us.

Men | Reason | Wisdom |

John Locke

Curiosity in children is but an appetite for knowledge. One great reason why children abandon themselves wholly to silly pursuits and trifle away their time insipidly is, because they find their curiosity balked, and their inquiries neglected.

Appetite | Children | Curiosity | Knowledge | Reason | Time | Wisdom |

John Locke

New opinions are always suspected, and usually opposed, without any other reason but because they are not already common.

Reason | Wisdom |

Abraham Lincoln

When I'm getting ready to reason with a man, I spend one-third of my time thinking about myself and what I am going to say - and two-thirds thinking about him and what he is going to say.

Man | Reason | Thinking | Time | Wisdom |

John Locke

He that takes away reason to make way for revelation puts out the light of both, and does much the same as if he would persuade a man to put out his eyes the better to receive the remote light of an invisible star by a telescope.

Better | Light | Man | Reason | Receive | Revelation | Wisdom |

Maurice Maeterlinck, fully Count Maurice Polydore Marie Bernard Maeterlinck

It is from reason that justice springs, but goodness is born of wisdom.

Justice | Reason | Wisdom |

George T. Lucas, fully George Walton Lucas, Jr.

Life cannot be explained. The only reason for life is life. There is no why. We are. Life is beyond reason. One might think of life as a large organism, and we are but a small, symbiotic part of it. It is possible that on a spiritual level we are all connected in a way that continues beyond the comings and goings of various life forms. My best guess is that we share a collective spirit or life force or consciousness that encompasses and goes beyond individual life forms.

Consciousness | Force | Individual | Life | Life | Reason | Spirit | Wisdom | Think |

Walter Lippmann

Life is an irreversible process and for that reason its future can never be a repetition of the past.

Future | Life | Life | Past | Reason | Wisdom |

Walter Lippmann

The opposition is indispensable. A good statesman, like any other sensible human being, always learns more from his opponents than from his fervent supporters. For his supporters will push him to disaster unless his opponents show him where the dangers are. So if he is wise he will often pray to be delivered from his friends, because they will ruin him. But though it hurts, he ought also to pray never to be left without opponents; for they keep him on the path of reason and good sense.

Good | Indispensable | Opposition | Reason | Will | Wisdom | Wise |

Michel de Montaigne, fully Lord Michel Eyquem de Montaigne

I see men ordinarily more eager to discover a reason for things than to find out whether the things are so.

Men | Reason | Wisdom |

Baron de Montesquieu, fully Charles-Louis de Secondat, Baron de La Brède et de Montesquieu

Knowledge humanizes mankind, and reason inclines to mildness; but prejudices destroy every tender disposition.

Destroy | Knowledge | Mankind | Reason | Wisdom |

Pierre Nicole

We need a reason to speak, but none to keep silent.

Need | Reason | Wisdom |

Friedrich Nietzsche, fully Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche

There are questions whose truth or untruth cannot be decided by man; all the supreme questions, all the supreme problems of value are beyond human reason... To grasp the limits of reason - only this is true philosophy.

Man | Philosophy | Problems | Reason | Truth | Wisdom | Value |

Friedrich Nietzsche, fully Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche

The sphere of poetry does not lie outside the world as a fantastic impossibility spawned by a poet’s brain: it desires to be just the opposite, the unvarnished expression of the truth, and must precisely for that reason discard the mendacious finery of that alleged reality of the man of culture. The contrast between this real truth of nature and the lie of culture that poses as if it were the only reality is similar to that between the eternal core of things, the thing-in-itself, and the whole world of appearances.

Contrast | Culture | Eternal | Impossibility | Man | Nature | Poetry | Reality | Reason | Truth | Wisdom | World |

Raimon Panikkar, fully Raimon Panikkar-Alemany

To look for a purpose in Life outside Life itself amounts to killing Life. Reason is given by Life, not vice versa. Life is prior to meaning... Human life is joyful interrogation. Any answer is blasphemy.

Blasphemy | Life | Life | Meaning | Purpose | Purpose | Reason | Wisdom | Vice |

Friedrich Nietzsche, fully Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche

Many a man fails to become a thinker for the sole reason that his memory is too good.

Good | Man | Memory | Reason | Wisdom |

Caroline Norton

I can endure a melancholy man, but not a melancholy child; the former, in whatever slough he may sink, can raise his eyes either to the kingdom of reason or of hope; but the little child is entirely absorbed and weighed down by one black poison-drop of the present.

Hope | Little | Man | Melancholy | Present | Reason | Wisdom | Child |

William Penn

And yet we are very apt to be full of ourselves, instead of Him that made what we so much value, and but for whom we can have no reason to value ourselves. For we have nothing that we can call our own, no, not ourselves; for we are all but tenants, and at will too, of the great Lord of ourselves, and the rest of this great farm, the world that we live upon.

Lord | Nothing | Reason | Rest | Will | Wisdom | World | Value |