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

Robert E. Carter, fully Robert Edgar Carter

The meaning of life is to be found in the living of it, and even for the individual a considerable range of possibilities and an unending flow of reflections upon your life constitutes part of that meaning. Play has no ultimate goal, no serious goal that will bring it to an end, but rather renews itself in constant repetition, with no repetition being an exact repeat of a prior instance. Living has a series of goals and is serious as well as playful, and yet the goals are always in transformation, or at least always in doubt. Circumstances are often similar, but it is not easy to specify exactness in your lived experience, even with someone with whom you have lived most of your life.

Circumstances | Doubt | Experience | Goals | Individual | Life | Life | Meaning | Play | Will |

Robert E. Carter, fully Robert Edgar Carter

However complex the background of a so-called meaningful life, the meaning itself is directly experienced. And the ultimate ground or place of meaning arising is the individual human being, in the specific situations of his or her life. While the sources of meaning are almost predictably outside the individual self, the experiences of meaningfulness are necessarily someone’s experiences.

Individual | Life | Life | Meaning | Self |

Robert E. Carter, fully Robert Edgar Carter

The enrichment of meaning is the enrichment of feeling, and the genuine enrichment of feeling capacity is both quantitative and qualitative. We must enhance our emotional life quantitatively and qualitatively.

Capacity | Life | Life | Meaning |

Joe Boot

We live in a culture that is morally adrift, desperately searching for meaning and absolutes to anchor the soul.

Culture | Meaning | Soul |

Robert E. Carter, fully Robert Edgar Carter

The achievement of meaning in life is akin to the gaining of knowledge: neither can be simply handed on; we all must gain each for ourselves

Achievement | Knowledge | Life | Life | Meaning |

Joe Boot

How we view life is ultimately that which gives us meaning, value and purpose… Our worldview determines how we solve these problems: What are we? Where did we come from? What does it mean to be human? What is truth? What is the meaning and purpose of life? Why is there so much evil in the world? How should we live? What happens when we die? Does it matter?

Evil | Life | Life | Meaning | Problems | Purpose | Purpose | Truth | World | Value |

J. B. Bury, fully John Bagnell Bury

If there were a good cause for believing that the earth would be uninhabitable in A.D. 2000 or 2100 the doctrine of Progress would lose its meaning and would automatically disappear.

Cause | Doctrine | Earth | Good | Meaning | Progress |

L. Francis Edmunds

It is the inner values by which men live that give meaning to life.

Life | Life | Meaning | Men |

Albert Einstein

The essence of the Jewish concept of life seems to me to be the affirmation of life for all creatures. For the life of the individual has meaning only in the service of enhancing and ennobling the life of every living thing. Life is holy; i.e., it is the highest worth on which all other values depend.

Individual | Life | Life | Meaning | Service | Worth |

Anthony J. D'Angelo

The greatest gift that you can give yourself is a little bit of your own attention.

Attention | Little |

Martin D’Arcy, fully Fr. Martin Cyril D'Arcy

We cannot leave behind what has once been true, for progress is an advance into truth, a deeper appreciation and love of what is familiar, be it a birthright, or a gift such as Revelation.

Appreciation | Love | Progress | Revelation | Truth | Appreciation |

Stephen A. Erickson

In the axial mode, human life is understood as involving a journey in which those who are successful move from a Lower to a Higher Realm. This journey is central to the meaning of life. Through an elevated mode of knowing, the world as we ordinarily experience is largely left behind, deemed less if not illusory, and the domain of reality itself is approached.

Experience | Journey | Knowing | Life | Life | Meaning | Reality | World |

Stephen A. Erickson

An important way to distinguish philosophy from religion is that philosophy, at its best, raises questions, whereas religion provides answers. Answers can sometimes lose their force, however, if the questions to which they provide answers have somehow been lost, muted, or superseded. But philosophy can never end. As long as we live, we are going to ask ourselves about the meaning of life. Some have written about the “end of philosophy.” It has been thought that philosophy exists only if you can construe life as a journey traveling to a new and different dimension. Some have said that the cognitive sciences, linguistics, neuroscience, and so forth will advance so much that traditional technical problems of philosophy will diminish. Insofar as philosophy is a pursuit of the art of living providing (often conflicting) guidance for living, there is a future for philosophy.

Art | Distinguish | Force | Future | Guidance | Important | Journey | Life | Life | Meaning | Philosophy | Problems | Religion | Thought | Will | Guidance | Art | Thought |

George Walter Fiske

Wonder is the attitude of reverence for the infinite values and meaning over God’s purpose and patience in it all.

God | Meaning | Patience | Purpose | Purpose | Reverence | Wonder |

Erich Fromm, fully Erich Seligmann Fromm

The specific meaning of God depends on what is the most desirable good for a person.

God | Good | Meaning | God |

Stephen A. Erickson

A grand meta-narrative is a story of the development and purpose of human history in which we as individual can find a place and play a role. Four basic meta-narratives: (1) Platonic Christian is the idea of life as a journey to another unchanging realm. (2) Hegel’s view that history is the unfolding of the consciousness of God. (3) Marx’s notion of another revolution ushering in a new era. (4) Nietzsche’s idea that there is no “beyond” and that the only meaning comes through creative activities through which we shape a life for ourselves.

Consciousness | Era | God | History | Individual | Journey | Life | Life | Meaning | Play | Purpose | Purpose | Revolution | Story |

Erich Fromm, fully Erich Seligmann Fromm

There is no meaning in life except the meaning man gives his life by the unfolding of his power, by living productively… Only constant vigilance, activity, and effort can keep us from failing in the one task that matters – the full development of our powers within the limitations set up by the laws of our existence.

Effort | Existence | Life | Life | Man | Meaning | Power | Vigilance |