
Variant: You could attach prices to ideas. Some cost a lot some little. … And how do you pay for ideas? I believe: with courage.
Source: Culture and Value (1980), p. 52e
Source: Culture and Value (1980), p. 60e
Variant: You could attach prices to ideas. Some cost a lot some little. … And how do you pay for ideas? I believe: with courage.
Source: Culture and Value (1980), p. 52e
“But surely for everything you love you have to pay some price.”
Source: An Autobiography
“There are some ideas so absurd that only an intellectual could believe them.”
Possibly a paraphrase of Bertrand Russell in My Philosophical Development (1959): "This is one of those views which are so absurd that only very learned men could possibly adopt them." It is similar in meaning to Orwell's line from Notes on Nationalism (1945): "One has to belong to the intelligentsia to believe things like that: no ordinary man could be such a fool." However, Russell was commenting not on politics, as Orwell was, but on some philosophers and their ideas about language.
Misattributed
Variant: Some ideas are so stupid that only intellectuals believe them.
“Some people have no idea what they're doing, and a lot of them are really good at it.”
Source: How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big: Kind of the Story of My Life
“What a terrible price students are paying now for the idea of comfort.”
2010s, Who's too Weak to Live with Freedom? (2013)
“If you want me to treat your ideas with more respect, get some better ideas.”
Source: Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008