Explore popular quotes and sayings by a French priest Ernest Dimnet.
Last updated on November 5, 2024.
Ernest Dimnet (1866-1954), French priest, writer and lecturer, is the author of The Art of Thinking, a popular book on thinking and reasoning during the 1930s.
The history of the past interests us only in so far as it illuminates the history of the present.
Architecture, of all the arts, is the one which acts the most slowly, but the most surely, on the soul.
Life is a succession of lessons enforced by immediate reward, or, oftener, by immediate chastisement.
Most people suspend their judgment till somebody else has expressed his own and then they repeat it.
Ideas are the root of creation.
A book, like a landscape, is a state of consciousness varying with readers.
Children have to be educated, but they have also to be left to educate themselves.
Education is the methodical creation of the habit of thinking.
The happiness of most people is not ruined by great catastrophes or fatal errors, but by the repetition of slowly destructive little things.
All serious conversations gravitate towards philosophy.
Americans cannot realize how many chances for mental improvement they lose by their inveterate habit of keeping six conversations when there are twelve in the room.
Mankind might be divided between multitude who hate to be kept waiting because they get bored and the happy few who rather like it because it gives them time for thought.
Do not read good books-life is too short for that-read only the best.
Whatever we read from intense curiosity gives us a model of how we should always read.
Whatever we read from intense curiosity gives us the model of how we should always read. Plodding along page after page with an equal attention to each word results in attention to mere words.
Learn to attack things frontally but according to the most scientific methods.
Many men absorbed in business show such a rare quality of culture that we are surprised at it. The reason invariably is partly because hard work and even the weariness it leaves carry a nobility with them, but also because there is no room in such lives for inferior mental occupation.
The object of reflection is invariably the discovery of something satisfying to the mind which was not there at the beginning of the search.
We all more or less consciously note this. We cannot help observing that all serious conversations gravitate towards philosophy.
Too often we forget that genius, too, depends upon the data within its reach, that even Archimedes could not have devised Edison's inventions.
Reading, to most people, means an ashamed way of killing time disguised under a dignified name
Ideas are the roots of creation.
A school is a place through which you have to pass before entering life, but where the teaching proper does not prepare you for life.
Every now and then we discover in the seething mass of humanity round us a person who does not seem to need anybody else, and the contrast with ourselves is stinging.
Prejudices subsist in people's imagination long after they have been destroyed by their experience.
You can believe in God without believing in immortality, but it is hard to see how anyone can believe in immortality and not believe in God.