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

N. Scott Momaday, fully Navarre Scott Momaday

We are what we imagine. Our very existence consists in our imagination of ourselves... The greatest tragedy that can befall us is to go unimagined.

Existence | Imagination | Tragedy | Wisdom |

Plotinus NULL

Not all who perceive with eyes the sensible products of art are affected alike by the same object, but if they know it for the outward portrayal of an archetype subsisting in intuition, their hearts are shaken and they recapture memory of that Original.

Art | Intuition | Memory | Object | Wisdom | Art |

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 |

Adam Gottlob Oehlenschlager

The plays of natural lively children are the infancy of art. Children live in a world of imagination and feeling. They invest the most insignificant object with any form they please, and see in it whatever they wish to see.

Art | Children | Imagination | Infancy | Object | Wisdom | World |

Samuel Richardson

Romances, in general, are calculated rather to fire the imagination than to inform the judgment.

Imagination | Judgment | Wisdom |

Jean-Jacques Rousseau

The world of reality has its limits; the world of imagination is boundless. Not being able to enlarge the one, let us contract the other; for it is from their difference that all evils arise which render us unhappy.

Imagination | Reality | Wisdom | World |

Simonides, aka Simonedes of Ceos NULL

The chief aid to memory is order.

Aid | Memory | Order | Wisdom |

Tauri NULL

The excitement of tomorrow's science will be in the discovery of the amino acids' memory storage capacities.

Discovery | Excitement | Memory | Science | Tomorrow | Will | Wisdom | Discovery |

Dugald Stewart

The faculty of imagination is the great spring of human activity, and the principal source of human improvement. As it delights in presenting to the mind scenes and characters more perfect than those which we are acquainted with, it prevents us from ever being completely satisfied with our present condition, or with our past attainments, and engages us continually in the pursuit of some untried enjoyment, or of some ideal excellence. Destroy this faculty, and the condition of man will become as stationary as that of the brutes.

Destroy | Enjoyment | Excellence | Imagination | Improvement | Man | Mind | Past | Present | Will | Wisdom |

Lillian Smith, fully Lillian Eugenia Smith

To believe in something not yet proved and to underwrite it with our lives; it is the only way we can leave the future open. Man, surrounded by facts, permitting himself no surprise, no intuitive flash, no great hypothesis, no risk, is in a locked cell. Ignorance cannot seal the mind and imagination more securely.

Future | Hypothesis | Ignorance | Imagination | Man | Mind | Risk | Wisdom |

William Warburton

Enthusiasm is that temper of the mind in which the imagination has got the better of the judgment.

Better | Enthusiasm | Imagination | Judgment | Mind | Temper | Wisdom |

Alexis de Tocqueville, fully Alexis-Charles-Henri Clérel de Tocqueville

In times when the passions are beginning to take charge of the conduct of human affairs, one should pay less attention to what men of experience and common sense are thinking than to what is preoccupying the imagination of dreamers.

Attention | Beginning | Common Sense | Conduct | Experience | Imagination | Men | Sense | Thinking | Wisdom |

Simone Weil

We have to endure the discordance between imagination and fact. It is better to say, "I am suffering," than to say, "This landscape is ugly."

Better | Imagination | Suffering | Ugly | Wisdom |

Lionel Trilling

Unless we insist that politics is imagination and mind, we will learn that imagination and mind are politics, and of a kind we will not like.

Imagination | Mind | Politics | Will | Wisdom | Learn |

Edwin Percy Whipple

The eye observes only what the mind, the heart, and the imagination are gifted to see; and sight must be reinforced by insight before souls can be discerned as well as manners, ideas as well as objects, realities and relations as well as appearances and accidental connections.

Heart | Ideas | Imagination | Insight | Manners | Mind | Wisdom |