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

George Eliot, pen name of Mary Ann or Marian Evans

More helpful than all wisdom or counsel is one draught of simple human pity that will not forsake us.

Counsel | Pity | Will | Wisdom | Counsel |

Albert Einstein

The attempt to combine wisdom and power has only rarely been successful and then only for a short while.

Power | Wisdom |

Henry Ford

Anyone who stops learning is old, whether this happens at twenty or at eighty. Anyone who keeps on learning not only remains young but becomes constantly more valuable, regardless of physical capacity.

Capacity | Learning | Wisdom |

Fazang, also Fa-Tsang or Fāzàng NULL

The universal of an atom containing emptiness and existence. This means that the atom has no intrinsic nature, so it is empty; yet its illusory characteristics are evident, so it is existent. Indeed, because illusory form has no essence, it must be no different from emptiness, and real emptiness contains qualities permeating to the surface of existence. Seeing that form is empty produces great wisdom and not dwelling in birth-and-death; seeing that emptiness is form produces great compassion and not dwelling in nirvana. When form and emptiness are nondual, compassion and wisdom are not different; only this is true seeing.

Birth | Compassion | Death | Existence | Means | Nature | Qualities | Wisdom |

Euripedes NULL

Some wisdom must thou learn from one who's wise.

Wisdom | Wise | Learn |

Ted W. Engstrom

We must expect to fail, but fail in a learning posture, determined not to repeat the mistakes, and to maximize the benefits from what is learned in the process.

Learning | Wisdom |

John Florio

The wisdom of a foole is in his tongue, & the tongue of the wise man is hydden in his hart.

Man | Wisdom | Wise |

Martin Henry Fischer

Knowledge is a process of piling up facts; wisdom lies in their simplification.

Knowledge | Wisdom |

Euripedes NULL

We pay a high price for being intelligent. Wisdom hurts.

Price | Wisdom |

Henry Giles

It should be the work of a genuine and noble patriotism to raise the life of the nation to the level of its privileges; to harmonize its general practice with its abstract principles; to reduce to actual facts the ideals of its institutions; to elevate instruction into knowledge; to deepen knowledge into wisdom; to render knowledge and wisdom complete in righteousness; and to make the love of country perfect in the love of man.

Abstract | Ideals | Knowledge | Life | Life | Love | Man | Patriotism | Practice | Principles | Righteousness | Wisdom | Work | Instruction |

Benjamin Franklin

The doors of Wisdom are never shut.

Wisdom |

Norman Geschwind

One must remember that practically all of us have a number of significant learning disabilities. For example, I am grossly unmusical and cannot carry a tune. We happen to live in a society in which the child who has trouble learning to read is in difficulty. Yet we have all seen dyslexic children who have either superior visual-perception or visual-motor skills. My suspicion would be that in an illiterate society such a child would be in little difficulty and might in fact do better because of his superior visual-perception talents, while many of us who function here might do poorly in a society in which a quite different array of talents was needed in order to be successful. As the demands of society change will we acquire a new group of "minimally brain damaged?"

Better | Change | Children | Difficulty | Example | Learning | Little | Order | Perception | Society | Suspicion | Will | Wisdom | Society | Trouble | Child |

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Go to the place where the thing you wish to know is native; your best teacher is there. Where the thing you wish to know is so dominant that you must breathe its very atmosphere, there teaching is most thorough, and learning is most easy. You acquire a language most readily in the country where it is spoken; you study mineralogy best among miners; and so with everything else.

Language | Learning | Study | Wisdom | Teacher |

Margaret Fuller, fully Sara Margaret Fuller, Marchese Ossoli

It is astonishing what force, purity, and wisdom it requires for a human being to keep clear of falsehoods.

Force | Purity | Wisdom |

Henry Giles

The true greatness and the true happiness of a country consist in wisdom; in that enlarged an comprehensive wisdom which includes education, knowledge, religion, virtue, freedom, with every influence which advances and every institution which supports them.

Education | Freedom | Greatness | Influence | Knowledge | Religion | Virtue | Virtue | Wisdom | Happiness |

Sigmund Freud, born Sigismund Schlomo Freud

Just as a cautious businessman avoids tying up all his capital in one concern, so, perhaps, worldly wisdom will advise us not to look for the whole of our satisfaction from a single aspiration.

Aspiration | Will | Wisdom |

John Galsworthy

Boys and girls should be taught to think first of others in material things; they should be infected with the wisdom to know that in making smooth the way lies the road to their own health and happiness.

Boys | Health | Wisdom | Think |

Erle Stanley Gardner

Where ignorance is bliss, a little learning is a dangerous thing.

Ignorance | Learning | Little | Wisdom |

Julius Charles Hare (1795-1855) and his brother Augustus William Hare

Much of this world's wisdom is still acquired by necromancy - by consulting the oracular dead.

Wisdom | World |