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

Joan Borysenko

The work of healing is in peeling away the barriers of fear and past conditioning that keep us unaware of our true nature of wholeness and love.

Fear | Love | Nature | Past | Wholeness | Work |

John Foster, fully John Watson Foster

It is wonderful what strength and boldness of purpose and energy will come from the feeling that we are in the way of duty.

Boldness | Duty | Energy | Purpose | Purpose | Strength | Will |

John Foster Dulles

If only we are faithful to our past, we shall not have to fear our future. The cause of peace, justice and liberty need not fail and must not fail.

Cause | Fear | Future | Justice | Liberty | Need | Past | Peace |

John Milton

Superstition is but the fear of belief, religion is the confidence and trust. The greatest burden in the world is superstition, not only of ceremonies in the church, but of imaginary and scarecrow sins at home.

Belief | Church | Confidence | Fear | Religion | Superstition | Trust | World |

John Dryden

The florid, elevated, and figurative way is for the passions; for love and hatred, fear and anger, are begotten in the soul by showing their objects out of their true proportion, either greater than the life, or less; but instruction is to be given by showing them what they naturally are. A man is to be cheated into passion, but reasoned into truth.

Anger | Fear | Life | Life | Love | Man | Passion | Soul | Truth | Instruction |

John Ruskin

He who has truth in his heart need never fear the want of persuasion on his tongue.

Fear | Heart | Need | Persuasion | Truth |

John Ruskin

Every great man is always being helped by everybody; for his gift is to get out of all things and all persons.

Man |

John Ruskin

The weakest among us has a gift, however seemingly trivial, which is peculiar to him, and which worthily used, will be a gift also to his race.

Race | Will |

John Ruskin

Superstition, in all times and among all nations, is the fear of a spirit whose passions are those of a man, whose acts are the acts of a man; who is present in some places, not in others; who makes some places holy and not others; who is kind to one person, unkind to another; who is pleased or angry according to the degree of attention you pay him, or praise you refuse him; who is hostile generally to human pleasure, but may be bribed by sacrifice of a part of that pleasure into permitting the rest. This, whatever form of faith it colors, is the essence of superstition.

Attention | Faith | Fear | Man | Nations | Pleasure | Praise | Present | Rest | Sacrifice | Spirit | Superstition |

Jon Kabat-Zinn

The willingness to harm or hurt comes ultimately out of fear. Non-harming requires that you see your own fears and that you understand them and own them. Owning them means taking responsibility for them. Taking responsibility means not letting fear completely dictate your vision or your view. Only mindfulness completely dictate your vision or your view. Only mindfulness of our own clinging and rejecting, and a willingness to grapple with these mind states, however painful the encounter, can free us from this circle of suffering. Without a daily embodiment in practice, lofty ideals tend to succumb to self-interest.

Fear | Harm | Ideals | Means | Mind | Mindfulness | Practice | Responsibility | Self | Self-interest | Suffering | Vision | Understand |

John Stuart Mill

Hitherto it is questionable if all the mechanical inventions yet made have lightened the day’s toil of any human being. They have enabled a greater population to live the same life of drudgery and imprisonment, and an increased number of manufacturers and others to make fortunes. They have increased the comforts of the middle classes. But they have not yet begun to effect those great changes in human destiny, which it is in their nature and in their futurity to accomplish. Only when, in addition to just institutions, the increase of mankind shall be under the deliberate guidance of judicious foresight, and the conquests made form the powers of nature by the intellect and energy of scientific discoverers, become the common property of the species, and the means of improving and elevating the universal lot.

Day | Destiny | Energy | Foresight | Guidance | Life | Life | Mankind | Means | Nature | Property | Guidance | Intellect |

John Ruskin

The Divine mind is as visible in its full energy of operation on every lowly bank and mouldering stone as in the lifting of the pillars of heaven, and settling the foundation of the earth.

Earth | Energy | Heaven | Mind |

John Ruskin

Boredom is ... a vital problem for the moralist, since half the sins of mankind are caused by the fear of it.

Fear | Mankind |

Joseph Campbell

The conquest of the fear of death is the recovery of life's joy. One can experience an unconditional affirmation of life only when one has accepted death, not as contrary to life but as an aspect of life. Life in its becoming is always shedding death, and on the point of death. The conquest of fear yields the courage of life. That is the cardinal initiation of every heroic adventure - fearlessness and achievement.

Achievement | Adventure | Conquest | Courage | Death | Experience | Fear | Joy | Life | Life |

Joseph Campbell

This, I believe, is the great Western truth: that each of us is a completely unique creature and that, if we are ever to give any gift to the world, it will have to come out of our own experience and fulfillment of our own potentialities, not someone else's. In the traditional Orient, on the other hand, and generally in all traditionally grounded societies, the individual is cookie-molded. His duties are put upon him in exact and precise terms, and there's no way of breaking out from them. When you go to a guru to be guided on a spiritual path, he knows just where you are on the traditional path, just where you have to go next, just what you must do to get there.

Experience | Fulfillment | Individual | Truth | Unique | Will | World |

Lewis Mumford

The ultimate gift of conscious life is a sense of the mystery that encompasses it.

Life | Life | Mystery | Sense |

Lewis Mumford

We have created an industrial order geared to automatism, where feeble-mindedness or acquired, is necessary for docile productivity in the factory; and where a pervasive neurosis is the final gift of the meaningless life that issues forth at the other end.

Life | Life | Order |

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

The heart never grows better by age, I fear rather worse; always harder. A young liar will be an old one; and a young knave will only be a greater knave as he grows older.

Age | Better | Fear | Heart | Will | Old |