This site is dedicated to the memory of Dr. Alan William Smolowe who gave birth to the creation of this database.
To ask for overt renunciation of a cherished doctrine is to expect too much of human nature. Men do not repudiate the doctrines and dogma to which they have sworn their loyalty. Instead they rationalize, revise, and reinterpret them to meet new needs and new circumstances, all the while protesting that their heresy is the purest orthodoxy.
Circumstances | Doctrine | Dogma | Human nature | Loyalty | Loyalty | Men | Nature | Wisdom |
Details often kill initiative, but there have been few successful men who weren't good at details. Don't ignore details. Lick them.
Good | Initiative | Kill | Men | Wisdom |
Obstinacy in opinions holds the dogmatist in the chains of error, without hope of emancipation.
Sigmund Freud, born Sigismund Schlomo Freud
This age of childhood, in which the sense of shame is unknown, seems a paradise when we look back upon it alter, and paradise itself is nothing but the mass-phantasy of the childhood of the individual. This is why in paradise men are naked and unashamed, until the moment arrives when shame and fear awaken; expulsion follows, and sexual life and cultural development begin.
Age | Childhood | Fear | Individual | Life | Life | Men | Nothing | Paradise | Sense | Shame | Wisdom |
True religion is not what men see and admire; it is what God sees and loves... The cheerful consecration of all the powers of the soul; the worship which rising above all outward forms, ascends to God in the sweetest, dearest communion - a worship often too deep for utterance, and than which the highest heaven knows nothing more sublime.
Consecration | God | Heaven | Men | Nothing | Religion | Soul | Wisdom | Worship | God |
Fools and wise men are equally harmless. It is the half-fools and the half-wise that are dangerous.
The equal right of all men to the use of land is as clear as their equal right to breathe the air - it is a right proclaimed by the fact of their existence. For we cannot suppose that some men have a right to be in this world, and other have no right.
One ought, every day at least, to hear a little song, read a good poem, see a fine picture, and, if it were possible, to speak a few reasonable words... Men are so inclined to content themselves with what is commonplace; the spirit and the senses so easily grow dead. It is only because they are not used to taste of what is excellent that take generality of people take delight in silly and insipid things, provided they are new.
Day | Good | Little | Men | People | Spirit | Taste | Wisdom | Words |
If men are so wicked with religion, what would they be without it?
Is there anything men take more pains about than to render themselves unhappy?
The phrases that men hear or repeat continually, end by becoming convictions and ossify the organs of intelligence.
Convictions | Intelligence | Men | Wisdom |
If I were to prescribe one process in the training of men which is fundamental to success in any direction, it would be thoroughgoing training in the habit of observation. It is a habit which every one of us should be seeking ever more to perfect.
Charles Montagu Halifax, 1st Earl of Halifax, Lord Halifax
Could we know what men are most apt to remember, we might know what they are most apt to do.