PHILOSOPHY QUOTES II

quotations about philosophy

Philosophy quote

What we philosophers can do is just correct the questions.

SLAVOJ ZIZEK

interview, New Statesman, October 8, 2013

Tags: Slavoj Zizek


Among all the characters of mankind, that of the Philosopher is the most perfect. Distinguished from those of the inferior kind, by clearer and more distinct perceptions; by more comprehensive views of both nature and art; by a more ardent love and higher admiration of what is excellent; by a firmer attachment to virtue, and the general good of the world; by a lower regard for all inferior beauties compared with the supreme, consisting in rectitude of conduct and dignitude of behaviour; by a greater moderation in prosperity, and greater patience and courage under the evils of life; the real Philosopher, though not absolutely perfect, sets the grandeur of human genius in the fairest light.

WELLINS CALCOTT

Thoughts Moral and Divine

Tags: Wellins Calcott


Philosophy, beginning in wonder, as Plato and Aristotle said, is able to fancy everything different from what it is. It sees the familiar as if it were strange, and the strange as if it were familiar. It can take things up and lay them down again. It rouses us from our native dogmatic slumber and breaks up our caked prejudices.

WILLIAM JAMES

Some Problems of Philosophy

Tags: William James


Civilizations ultimately run on ideas, and societies that want to prosper should, so to speak, work out them out, manipulating their intellectual muscles regularly.

PASCAL-EMMANUEL GOBRY

"France's strange, wonderful love affair with philosophy", The Week, April 18, 2016


Philosophy has never been anything but a disavowal of the reality principle.

JEAN BAUDRILLARD

Cool Memories

Tags: Jean Baudrillard


Nor may a philosopher, any more than a poet, be a mere link in a chain: he must be a staple firmly and deeply fixt in the adamantine walls of Truth. If he rightly deserves the name, his mind must be impregnated with some of the primordial ideas, of life and being, man and nature, fate and freedom, order and law, thought and will, power and God. He may have received them from others; but he must receive them as seeds: they must teem and germinate within him, and mingle with the essence of his spirit, and must shape themselves into a new original growth. He who merely takes a string of propositions from former writers, and busies himself in drawing fresh inferences from them, may be a skilful logician or psychologer, but has no claim to the high title of a philosopher.

JULIUS CHARLES HARE

Guesses at Truth

Tags: Julius Charles Hare


A mind rightly instituted in the school of philosophy, acquires at once the stability of the oak and the flexibility of the osier.

OLIVER GOLDSMITH

Citizen of the World

Tags: Oliver Goldsmith


Divine philosophy weeds from our breast by degrees full many a vice and every kind of error; she is the first to teach us what is right.

JUVENAL

attributed, Great Thoughts from Classic Authors

Tags: Juvenal


The sole function of philosophy is to lead us to happiness by way of the shortest possible route.

HENRI BERGSON

The Philosophy of Poetry

Tags: Henri Bergson


It is unfortunately very difficult to describe the nature of philosophy in a small compass; the only satisfaction that an author can draw from the attempt to do so lies in the knowledge that an answer to the question "What is philosophy?" is apt to seem persuasive only to the extent that it is brief. The more one ponders over the qualifications that any reasoned answer must contain, the more one is driven to the conclusion that this question is itself one of the principal subjects of philosophical thinking.

ROGER SCRUTON

Short History of Modern Philosophy

Tags: Roger Scruton


For Hume, skepticism about metaphysical subjects ended in an indolence born of seclusion. The only solution was to transfer the skeptical impulse in philosophy from the solitude of the study to the wider social world. Under these circumstances, skepticism fostered equanimity rather than discontent. In society, the true skeptic acknowledged the value of common sense without submitting slavishly to its whims. Skepticism in this context was profitable and enabling; it criticized without destroying the conditions of criticism, which depended on the existence of society and government. The positive results of criticism could be seen in society, politics, and morals. Philosophy could expose damaging ideas in ethics, unsocial attitudes in religion, and dangerous postures in politics.

RICHARD BOURKE

"Hume's Call to Action", The Nation, April 20, 2016


The philosopher places himself at the summit of thought; from there he views what the world has been and what it must become. He is not just an observer, he is an actor; he is an actor of the highest kind in a moral world because it is his opinion of what the world must become that regulates society.

HENRI DE SAINT-SIMON

Memoire sur la science de l'homme


Do not commence your exercises in philosophy in those regions where an error can deliver you over to the executioner.

GEORG CHRISTOPH LICHTENBERG

"Notebook C", Aphorisms

Tags: Georg Christoph Lichtenberg


Whoever wishes to become a philosopher must learn not to be frightened by absurdities.

BERTRAND RUSSELL

The Problems of Philosophy

Tags: Bertrand Russell


The maxim, "An unexamined life is not worth living," is the priceless legacy of Socrates to the generations of men who have followed him upon this earth. The beings who have stood on humanity's summit are those, and only those, who have heard the voice of Socrates across the centuries. The others are a superior kind of cattle.

NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER

lecture at Columbia University, March 4, 1908

Tags: Nicholas Murray Butler


Philosophy should quicken life, not deaden it.

SUSAN GLASPELL

Little Masks

Tags: Susan Glaspell


The main business of natural philosophy is to argue from phenomena without feigning hypothesis, and to deduce causes from effects till we come to the very first cause, which certainly is not mechanical; and not only to unfold the mechanism of the world, but chiefly to resolve these, and to such like questions.

ISAAC NEWTON

A Treatise on Physics

Tags: Isaac Newton


Philosophy must indeed recognize the possibility that the people rise to it, but must not lower itself to the people.

GEORG WILHELM FRIEDRICH HEGEL

attributed, Introduction to the Critical Journal of Philosophy

Tags: Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel


A true philosopher is married to wisdom; he needs no other bride.

PROCLUS

attributed, Day's Collacon


Shall I show you the sinews of a philosopher? "What sinews are those?" -- A will undisappointed; evils avoided; powers daily exercised, careful resolutions; unerring decisions.

EPICTETUS

Discourses

Tags: Epictetus