
“What we think out for ourselves forms channels in which other thoughts will flow.”
Source: Aphorisms and Reflections (1901), p. 274
Source: Bernard Shaw in Twilight (1943), II
Context: Shaw knows at any moment, on any subject, what he thinks, what you will think, what others have thought, what all this thinking entails; and he takes the most elaborate pains to bring these thoughts to light in a form which is by turns abstract and familiar, conciliatory and aggressive, obvious and inferential, comic and puzzling. In a word, Shaw is perhaps the most consciously conscious mind that has ever thought — certainly the most conscious since Rousseau; which may be why both of them often create the same impression of insincerity amounting to charlatanism.
Yet it is by excess of honesty that Shaw himself lent color to his representation as an inconsequential buffoon bent on monopolizing the spotlight.
“What we think out for ourselves forms channels in which other thoughts will flow.”
Source: Aphorisms and Reflections (1901), p. 274
Michel Henry, Marx II. Une philosophie de l’économie, éd. Gallimard, coll. « Nrf », 1976, p. 445
Books on Economy and Politics, Marx. A Philosophy of Human Being (1976)
Original: (fr) Marx certes était athée, « matérialiste », etc. Mais chez un philosophe aussi, il convient de distinguer ce qu’il est de ce qu’il croit être. Ce qui compte, ce n’est d’ailleurs pas ce que Marx pensait et que nous ignorons, c’est ce que pensent les textes qu’il a écrits. Ce qui paraît en eux, de façon aussi évidente qu’exceptionnelle dans l’histoire de la philosophie, c’est une métaphysique de l’individu. Marx est l’un des premiers penseurs chrétiens de l’Occident.
Source: How to Stop Worrying and Start Living (1948), p. 5
“A man is but the product of his thoughts. What he thinks, he becomes.”
In Ethical Religion, (Madras: S. Ganesan, 1922), p. 62 http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015002732066?urlappend=%3Bseq=66
1920s
Variant: A man is but the product of his thoughts. What he thinks, he becomes.
Source: Culture and Value (1980), p. 75e
“One loves to say what he knows, the other loves to say what he thinks.”
“Sit down to write what you have thought, and not to think what you shall write.”
Page 180.
A Grammar of the English Language (1818)
“You think you know what I am, she thought, but all you’ve got is stories.”
Source: Nemesis Games (2015), Chapter 21 (p. 222)
“A man is literally what he thinks, his character being the complete sum of all his thoughts.”
As A Man Thinketh (1902)
Source: As a Man Thinketh