“A person who thought he knew everything simply didn’t understand how much there was to know.”
Source: The Diamond of Darkhold
Source: Catch-22
“A person who thought he knew everything simply didn’t understand how much there was to know.”
Source: The Diamond of Darkhold
Part 2, Book 1, Ch. 2
Ninety-Three (1874)
Context: Cimourdain was one of those men who have a voice within them, and who listen to it. Such men seem absent-minded; they are not; they are all attention.
Cimourdain knew everything and nothing. He knew everything about science, and nothing at all about life. Hence his inflexibility. His eyes were bandaged like Homer's Themis. He had the blind certainty of the arrow, which sees only the mark and flies to it. In a revolution, nothing is more terrible than a straight line. Cimourdain went straight ahead, as sure as fate.
Cimourdain believed that, in social geneses, the extreme point is the solid earth; an error peculiar to minds which replace reason with logic.
“He liked everything about the university except the students.”
Source: The Mote in God's Eye (1974), Chapter 19 “Channel Two’s Popularity” (p. 162)
“And, of course men know best about everything, except what women know better.”
Source: Middlemarch
As quoted in her obituary in The New York Times (14 December 1961) http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/0907.html
“What can man know about happiness except how to write it?”
Statek (1994)
Speech at Birkbeck College (20 March 1924), quoted in On England, and Other Addresses (1926), p. 146.
1924
“The white man knows how to make everything, but he does not know how to distribute it.”
GoodReads https://www.goodreads.com/author/quotes/5712889.Sitting_Bull
Attributed quotes
“He who knows how to suffer everything can dare everything.”
Qui sait tout souffrir peut tout oser.
Variant: He who knows how to suffer everything can dare everything.
Source: Reflections and Maxims (1746), p. 176.