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

Blaise Pascal

One-half of life is admitted by us to be passed in sleep, in which, however, it may appear otherwise, we have no perception of truth, and all our feelings are delusions; who knows but the other half of life, in which we think we are awake, is a sleep also, but in some respects different from the other, and from which we wake when we, as we call it sleep. As a man dreams often that he is dreaming, crowding one dreamy delusion on another.

Delusion | Dreams | Feelings | Life | Life | Man | Perception | Truth | Think |

Carl Friedrich Freiherr von Weizsäcker

There is not even a meaning to the word experience which would not presuppose the distinction between past and future.

Distinction | Experience | Future | Meaning | Past |

Bruce Barton

Most successful men have not achieved their distinction by having some new talent or opportunity presented to them. They have developed the opportunity that was at hand.

Distinction | Men | Opportunity | Talent |

Edmund Burke

The power of perpetuating our property in our families is one of the most valuable and interesting circumstances belonging to it, and that which tends the most to perpetuation of society itself. It makes our weakness subservient to our virtue; it grafts benevolence even upon avarice. The possession of family wealth and of the distinction which attends hereditary possessions (as most concerned into it), are the natural securities for this transmission.

Avarice | Benevolence | Circumstances | Distinction | Family | Possessions | Power | Property | Society | Virtue | Virtue | Weakness | Wealth | Society |

François Rabelais

I never sleep in comfort save when I am hearing a sermon or praying to God.

Comfort | God |

Georg Hegel, fully Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel

Will without freedom is an empty word, while freedom is actual only as will, as subject... Mind is in principle thinking, and man is distinguished from beast in virtue of thinking. But it must not be imagined that man is half thought and half will, and that he keeps thought in one pocket and will in another, for this would be a foolish idea. The distinction between thought and will is only that between the theoretical attitude and the practical. These, however, are surely not two faculties; the will is rather a special way of thinking, thinking translating itself into existence, thinking as the urge to give itself existence.

Distinction | Existence | Freedom | Man | Mind | Thinking | Thought | Virtue | Virtue | Will | Theoretical | Thought |

George Bernard Shaw

All who achieve real distinction in life begin as revolutionists. the most distinguished persons become more revolutionary as they grow older, though they are commonly supposed to become more conservative owing to their loss of faith in conventional methods of reform.

Distinction | Faith | Life | Life | Reform | Loss |

George Bernard Shaw

When a man wants to murder a tiger, he calls it sport: when the tiger wants to murder him, he calls it ferocity. The distinction between crime and justice is no greater.

Crime | Distinction | Justice | Man | Murder | Wants | Murder |

George Santayana

A dramatic centre of action and passion… utterly unlike what in modern philosophy we call consciousness. The soul causes the body to grow, to assume its ancestral shape, to develop all its ancestral instincts, to wake and to sleep by turns… and at the same time determines the responses that the living body shall make to the world.

Action | Body | Consciousness | Passion | Philosophy | Soul | Time | World |

George Santayana

That the end of life should be death may sound sad: yet what other end can anything have? The end of an evening party is to go to bed; but is use is to gather congenial people together, that they may pass the time pleasantly. An invitation to dance is not rendered ironical because the danced cannot last for ever; the youngest of us and the most vigorously wound up, after a few hours, has had enough of sinuous stepping and prancing. The transitoriness of things is essential to their physical being, and not at all sad in itself; it becomes sad by virtue of a sentimental illusion, which makes us imagine that they wish to endure, and that their end is always untimely; but in a healthy nature it is not so. what is truly sad is to have some impulse frustrated in the midst of its career, and robbed of its chosen object; and what is painful is to have an organ lacerated or destroyed when it is still vigorous, and not ready for its natural sleep and dissolution. We must not confuse the itch which our unsatisfied instincts continue to cause with the pleasure of satisfying and dismissing each of them in turn. Could they all be satisfied harmoniously we should be satisfied once for all and completely. Then doing and dying would coincide throughout and be a perfect pleasure.

Cause | Death | Enough | Illusion | Impulse | Life | Life | Nature | Object | People | Pleasure | Sound | Time | Virtue | Virtue |

Henry Kissinger, fully Henry Alfred Kissinger

The political leaders with whom we are familiar generally aspire to be superstars rather than heroes. The distinction is crucial. Superstars strive for approbation; heroes walk alone. Superstars crave consensus; heroes define themselves by the judgment of a future they see it as their task to bring about. Superstars seek success in a technique for eliciting support; heroes pursue success as the outgrowth of inner values.

Distinction | Future | Judgment | Success |

Homer NULL

There is satiety of all things, of sleep and love, of sweet song and the goodly dance.

Love | Satiety |

Ibn Rahel

In a sound sleep the soul goes home to recruit her strength, which could not else endure the wear and tear of life.

Life | Life | Soul | Sound | Strength |

James Freeman Clarke

Never hurry; take plenty of exercise; always be cheerful, and take all the sleep you need, and you may expect to be well.

Hurry | Need | Plenty |

John Milton

Millions of spiritual creatures walk the earth unseen, both when we sleep and when we wake.

Earth |

John Donne

Death be not proud, though some have called Thee Mighty and dreadful, for thou art not so... One short sleep past, we wake eternally and death shall be no more; death, thou shalt die.

Art | Death | Art |

Lord Chesterfield, Philip Dormer Stanhope, 4th Earl of Chesterfield

Six, or at most seven, hour’s sleep is, for a constancy, as much as you or anybody else can want; more is only laziness and dozing, and is, I am persuaded, both unwholesome and stupefying.

Constancy | Laziness |

Meister Eckhart, formally Meister von Hochheim

If we hold fast to the distinction between today and tomorrow and yesterday, we hold fast to nothingness.

Distinction | Tomorrow |