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

Charles Langbridge Morgan

As knowledge increases, wonder deepens.

Knowledge | Wonder |

William Penn

Death cannot kill what never dies. Nor can Spirits ever be divided that love and live in the same Divine Principle; the Root and Record of their Friendship. If Absence be not Death, neither is it theirs. Death is but crossing the world, as Friends do the Seas; they live in one another still.

Absence | Death | Kill | Love | World | Friends |

Fritz A. Rothschild

Mankind will not perish for want of information; but only for want of appreciation. The beginning of our happiness lies in the understanding that life without wonder is not worth living. What we lack is not a will to believe but a will to wonder.

Appreciation | Beginning | Life | Life | Mankind | Understanding | Will | Wonder | Worth | Happiness |

Fritz A. Rothschild

The roots of ultimate insights are found not on the level of discursive thinking, but on the level of wonder and radical amazement, in the depth of awe, in our sensitivity to the mystery, in our awareness of the ineffable. It is the level on which the great things happen to the soul, where the unique insights of art, religion, and philosophy come into being.

Art | Awareness | Awe | Mystery | Philosophy | Religion | Soul | Thinking | Unique | Wonder | Awareness |

Fritz A. Rothschild

Fear is the anticipation and expectation of evil or pain, as contrasted with hope which is the anticipation of good. Awe, on the other hand, is the sense of wonder and humility inspired by the sublime or felt in the presence of mystery. Fear is “a surrender of the succors which reason offers,” awe is the acquisition of insights which the world holds in store for us. Awe, unlike fear, does not make us shrink from the awe-inspiring object, but, on the contrary, draws us near to it. That is why awe is compatible with both love and joy.

Anticipation | Awe | Evil | Expectation | Fear | Good | Hope | Humility | Joy | Love | Mystery | Object | Pain | Reason | Sense | Surrender | Wonder | World | Expectation |

Richard Powers

Science is not about control. It is about cultivating a perpetual condition of wonder in the face of something that forever grows one step richer and subtler than our latest theory about it. It is about reverence, not mastery.

Control | Reverence | Science | Wonder |

Mario Puzo, fully Mario Gianluigi Puzo

Keep your friends close, but keep your enemies closer.

Friends |

John Ray or Wray

In time of prosperity friends will be plenty. In times of adversity not one among twenty.

Adversity | Plenty | Prosperity | Time | Will | Friends |

Fritz A. Rothschild

Speculation does not precede faith. The antecedents of faith are the premise of wonder and the premise of praise.

Faith | Praise | Speculation | Wonder |

Michael J. Tucker

Forget your enemies. It's your friends you frustrate that cause all the problems.

Cause | Problems | Friends |

Jonathan Swift, pen names, M.B. Drapier, Lemuel Gulliver, Isaac Bickerstaff

I never wonder to see men wicked, but I often wonder to see them not ashamed.

Men | Wonder |

Albert Einstein

The most beautiful and profound emotion we can experience is the sensation of the mystical. It is the sower of all true science. He to whom this emotion is a stranger, who can no longer wonder and stand rapt in awe, is good as dead.

Awe | Experience | Good | Mystical | Science | Wonder |

Greg Trevor

When driving down the road of life, and you see all these headlights coming your way, don't wonder why everyone else is going the wrong way.

Life | Life | Wonder | Wrong |

Gerry Spence

I would rather have a mind opened by wonder than one closed by belief.

Belief | Mind | Wonder |

Albert Camus

We used to wonder where war lived, what it was that made it so vile. And now we realize that we know where it lives, that it is inside ourselves.

War | Wonder |

Alexander Hamilton

It is a just observation that the people commonly intend the public good. This often applies to their very errors. But their good sense would despise the adulator who should pretend that they always reason right about the means of promoting it. They known from experience that they sometimes err; and the wonder is that they so seldom err as they do, beset, as they continually are, by the wiles of parasites and sycophants, by the snares of the ambitious, the avaricious, the desperate, by the artifices of men who possess their confidence more then they deserve it, and of those who seek to possess rather than to deserve it.

Confidence | Despise | Experience | Good | Means | Men | Observation | People | Public | Reason | Right | Sense | Wonder |