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

Jiddu Krishnamurti

Belief is a denial of truth, belief hinders truth; to believe in God is not to find God. Neither the believer nor the non-believer will find God; because reality is the unknown, and your belief or non-belief in the unknown is merely a self-projection and therefore not real.

Belief | God | Reality | Will | God |

Jim Morrison

There are things known and there are things unknown and in between are the doors.

Joan Halifax, fully Roshi Joan Jiko Halifax

Death can come at any moment. You could die this afternoon; you could die tomorrow morning; you could die on your way to work; you could die in your sleep. Most of us try to avoid the sense that death can come at any time, but its timing is unknown to us. Can we live each day as if it were our last? Can we relate to one another as if there were no tomorrow?

Day | Death | Sense | Tomorrow |

Joseph Cook

The Unknown is an ocean. What is conscience? The compass of the Unknown.

Julian Huxley, fully Sir Julian Sorell Huxley

Man ... differs from all other animals in having a brain which can and largely does bring all the various elements of experience into contact, instead of keeping them in a series of wholly or largely separate compartments or channels. This not only provides the basis for conceptual thought, and so for all man's ideas and philosophic systems, ideals and works of art and creative imagination, but also for his battery of complex sentiments unknown in animals, such as reverence and religious awe, moral feelings (including hate and contempt arising from moral abhorrence), and love in its developed form.

Art | Contempt | Experience | Feelings | Hate | Ideals | Ideas | Love | Reverence | Art |

Laurens van der Post

I suspect it was...the old story of the implacable necessity of a man having honour within his own natural spirit. A man cannot live and temper his mettle without such honour. There is deep in him a sense of the heroic quest; and our modern way of life, with its emphasis on security, its distrust of the unknown and its elevation of abstract collective values has repressed the heroic impulse to a degree that may produce the most dangerous consequences.

Abstract | Distrust | Impulse | Man | Mettle | Necessity | Sense | Story | Temper | Old |

Lillian Smith, fully Lillian Eugenia Smith

Faith and doubt both are needed - not as antagonists, but working side by side to take us around the unknown curve.

Doubt |

Helena Blavatsky, aka Helena Petrovna "H.P." Blavatsky or Madame Blavatsky, born Helena von Hahn

The Universe is the periodical manifestation of this unknown Absolute Essence.

Absolute | Universe |

Marcel Proust, fully Valentin Louis Georges Eugène Marcel Proust

Reality is never more than a first step towards an unknown on the road to which one can never progress very far.

Progress |

Marcel Proust, fully Valentin Louis Georges Eugène Marcel Proust

Our vanity, our passions, our spirit of imitation, our abstract intelligence, our habits have long been at work, and it is the task of art to undo this work of theirs, making us travel back in the direction from which we have come to the depths where what has really existed lies unknown within us.

Abstract | Art | Spirit | Work | Art |

Cicero, fully Marcus Tullius Cicero, anglicized as Tully NULL

A nation can survive its fools, and even the ambitious. But it cannot survive treason from within. An enemy at the gates is less formidable, for he is known and carries his banner openly. But the traitor moves amongst those within the gate freely, his sly whispers rustling through all the alleys, heard in the very halls of government itself. For the traitor appears not a traitor; he speaks in accents familiar to his victims, and he wears their face and their arguments, he appeals to the baseness that lies deep in the hearts of all men. He rots the soul of a nation, he works secretly and unknown in the night to undermine the pillars of the city, he infects the body politic so that it can no longer resist. A murderer is less to fear.

Baseness | Body | Enemy | Government | Soul | Traitor | Treason | Government |

Maria Montessori

There is a part of a child's soul that has always been unknown but which must be known. With a spirit of sacrifice and enthusiasm we must go in search like those who travel to foreign lands and tear up mountains in their search for hidden gold. This is what the adults must do who seeks the unknown factor that lies hidden in the depths of a child's soul. This is a labor in which all must share, without distinction of nation, race, or social standing since it means the bringing forth of an indispensable element for the moral progress of mankind.

Distinction | Enthusiasm | Indispensable | Labor | Means | Progress | Sacrifice | Search | Soul | Spirit |

Maria Montessori

The adult must find within himself the still unknown error that prevents him from seeing the child as he is.

Error | Child |

Maya Angelou, born Marguerite Annie Johnson

It is this belief in a power larger than myself and other than myself which allows me to venture into the unknown and even the unknowable.

Belief | Power |

Mircea Eliade

In archaic and traditional societies, the surrounding world is conceived as a microcosm. At the limits of this closed world begins the domain of the unknown, of the formless. On this side there is ordered — because of inhabited and organized — space; on the other, outside this familiar space, there is the unknown and dangerous region of the demons, the ghosts, and the dead and foreigners — in a world, chaos or death or night. This image of an inhabited microcosm, surrounded by desert regions as a chaos or a kingdom of the dead, has survived even in highly evolved civilizations such as those of China, Mesopotamia and Egypt.

Death | World |

Moroccan Proverbs

A known mistake is better than an unknown truth.

Better | Mistake |

Newell Dwight Hillis

Self-reliance can turn a salesman into a merchant; a politician into a statesman; an attorney into a jurist; an unknown youth into a great leader. All are to be tomorrow's big leaders - those who in solitude sit above the clang and dust of time, with the world's secret trembling on their lips.

Solitude | Youth | Youth |

Nicholas Copernicus

If perchance there should be foolish speakers who, together with those ignorant of all mathematics, will take it upon themselves to decide concerning these things, and because of some place in the Scriptures wickedly distorted to their purpose, should dare to assail this my work, they are of no importance to me, to such an extent do I despise their judgment as rash. For it is not unknown that Lactantius, the writer celebrated in other ways but very little in mathematics, spoke somewhat childishly of the shape of the earth when he derided those who declared the earth had the shape of a ball. So it ought not to surprise students if such should laugh at us also. Mathematics is written for mathematicians to whom these our labors, if I am not mistaken, will appear to contribute something even to the ecclesiastical state the headship of which your Holiness now occupies

Despise | Earth | Judgment | Little | Mathematics | Will |

Nicholas of Cusa, also Nicholas of Kues and Nicolaus Cusanus NULL

Love is subsequent to knowledge and to the thing known, for nothing unknown is loved.

Knowledge | Nothing |

Nikolai Gogol, fully Nikolai Vasilievich Gogol or Nikolay Vasilyevich Gogol

I am fated to journey hand in hand with my strange heroes and to survey the surging immensity of life, to survey it through the laughter that all can see and through the tears unseen and unknown by anyone.

Journey | Laughter | Tears |