Over 40,000 Famous Quotes Sorted By Topic and Author
There is an accumulative cruelty in a number of men, though none in particular are ill-natured. Author: Lord Halifax
Topic: Psychological Subjects
...the more original a discovery the more obvious it seems afterwards. Author: Arthur Koestler
Topic: Psychological Subjects
However human, envy is certainly not one of the sources of discontent that a free society can eliminate. It is probably one of the essential conditions for the preservation of such a society that we do not countenance envy, not sanction its demands by camouflaging it as social justice, but treat it, in the words of John Stuart Mill, as "the most anti-social and evil of all passions. Author: F A Hayek
Topic: Psychological Subjects
From the saintly and single-minded idealist to the fanatic is often but a step. Author: F A Hayek
Topic: Psychological Subjects
Education rears disciples, imitators, and routinists, not pioneers of new ideas and creative geniuses. The schools are not nurseries of progress and improvement, but conservatories of tradition and unvarying modes of thought. Author: Ludwig Von Mises
Topic: Psychological Subjects
Facts per se can neither prove nor refute anything. Everything is decided by the interpretation and explanation of the facts, by the ideas and the theories. Author: Ludwig Von Mises
Topic: Psychological Subjects
In the world of reality, life, and human action there is no such thing as interests independent of ideas, preceding them temporarily and logically. What a man considers his interest is the result of his ideas. Author: Ludwig Von Mises
Topic: Psychological Subjects
It may indeed prove to be far the most difficult and not the least important task for human reason rationally to comprehend its own limitations. It is essential for the growth of reason that as individuals we should bow to forces and obey principles which we cannot hope fully to understand, yet on which the advance and even the preservation of civilization depend. Author: F A Hayek
Topic: Psychological Subjects
This is the constitutional limitation of man's knowledge and interests, the fact that he cannot know more than a tiny part of the whole of society and that therefore all that can enter into his motives are the immediate effects which his actions will have in the sphere he knows. Author: F A Hayek
Topic: Psychological Subjects
Do what thy manhood bids thee do, from none but self expect applause;He noblest lives and noblest dies who makes and keeps his self-made laws. Author: Richard Francis Burton
Topic: Psychological Subjects
The class of those who have the ability to think their own thoughts is separated by an unbridgeable gulf from the class of those who cannot. Author: Ludwig Von Mises
Topic: Psychological Subjects
The inertia of the human mind and its resistance to innovation are most clearly demonstrated not, as one might expect, by the ignorant mass- which is easily swayed once its imagination is caught- but by professionals with a vested interest in tradition and in the monopoly of learning. Innovation is a twofold threat to academic mediocrities: it endangers their oracular authority, and it evokes the deeper fear that their whole, laboriously constructed intellectual edifice might collapse. The academic backwoodsmen have been the curse of genius from Aristarchus to Darwin and Freud; they stretch, a solid and hostile phalanx of pedantic mediocrities, across the centuries. Author: Arthur Koestler
Topic: Psychological Subjects
To illustrate the difference between the innovator and the dull crowd of routinists who cannot even imagine that any improvement is possible, we need only refer to a passage in Engel's most famous book. Here, in 1878, Engels apodictically announced that military weapons are "now so perfected that no further progress of any revolutionizing influence is any longer possible." Henceforth "all further progress is by and large indifferent for land warfare. The age of evolution is in this regard essentially closed." This complacent conclusion shows in what the achievement of the innovator consists: he accomplishes what other people believe to be unthinkable and unfeasible. Author: Ludwig Von Mises
Topic: Psychological Subjects
Compared with the totality of knowledge which is continually utilized in the evolution of a dynamic civilization, the difference between the knowledge that the wisest and that which the most ignorant individual can deliberately employ is comparatively insignificant. Author: F A Hayek
Topic: Psychological Subjects
...it is largely because civilization enables us constantly to profit from knowledge which we individually do not possess and because each individual's use of his particular knowledge may serve to assist others unknown to him in achieving their ends that men as members of civilized society can pursue their individual ends so much more successfully than they could alone. Author: F A Hayek
Topic: Psychological Subjects
It is the worst of all superstitions to assume that the epistemological characteristics of one branch of knowledge must necessarily be applicable to any other branch. Author: Ludwig Von Mises
Topic: Psychological Subjects
Human reason can neither predict nor deliberately shape its own future. Its advances consist in finding out where it has been wrong. Author: F A Hayek
Topic: Psychological Subjects
The prerequisite of originality is the art of forgetting, at the proper moment, what we know. Author: Arthur Koestler
Topic: Psychological Subjects
Reason's biological function is to preserve and promote life and to postpone its extinction as long as possible. Thinking and acting are not contrary to nature; they are, rather, the foremost features of man's nature. The most appropriate description of man as differentiated from nonhuman beings is: a being purposively struggling against the forces adverse to his life. Author: Ludwig Von Mises
Topic: Psychological Subjects
Every fairly intelligent person is aware that the price of respectability is a muffled soul bent on the trivial and the mediocre.