
“Curiosity is the beginning of all wisdom.”
Dans un mois, dans un an (1957, Those Without Shadows, translated 1957)
Source: Glory Season (1993), Chapter 16 (p. 265)
“Curiosity is the beginning of all wisdom.”
Dans un mois, dans un an (1957, Those Without Shadows, translated 1957)
“Morality comes with the sad wisdom of age, when the sense of curiosity has withered.”
A Sort of Life, ch. 7, sct. 1 (1971)
“Every curiosity is in need of the curiosity of speech.”
Majlisi, Bihārul Anwār, vol.78, p. 335.
General Quotes
“The cure for boredom is curiosity. There is no cure for curiosity.”
Widely attributed to Dorothy Parker and to Ellen Parr, but the origin is unknown.
Attributed
“People say: idle curiosity. The one thing that curiosity cannot be is idle.”
[9847@jpl-devvax.JPL.NASA.GOV, 1990]
Usenet postings, 1990
“Damned meddlers. It’s hard to know when their curiosity is official and when it’s just curiosity.”
Source: The Five Gold Bands (1950), Chapter 6 (p. 65)
"Freedom as Teacher" in Human Options : An Autobiographical Notebook (1981).
Context: There is a tendency to mistake data for wisdom, just as there has always been a tendency to confuse logic with values, intelligence with insight. Unobstructed access to facts can produce unlimited good only if it is matched by the desire and ability to find out what they mean and where they lead. Facts are terrible things if left sprawling and unattended. They are too easily regarded as evaluated certainties rather than as the rawest of raw materials crying to be processed into the texture of logic. It requires a very unusual mind, Whitehead said, to undertake the analysis of a fact. The computer can provide a correct number, but it may be an irrelevant number until judgment is pronounced.