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Subject:
Source of the quotation: "The most dangerous man in the world..."
Category: Reference, Education and News > General Reference Asked by: jh963-ga List Price: $5.00 |
Posted:
31 Jan 2005 23:12 PST
Expires: 02 Mar 2005 23:12 PST Question ID: 466799 |
I'm looking for the correct quotation for this paraphrased quote: "The most dangerous man in the world is the man who is absolutely sure that he is right." This isn't the correct quote, but does give the sense of quotation. I'd like to have the correct quotation, and where it came from. Thanks, J. | |
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There is no answer at this time. |
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Subject:
Re: Source of the quotation: "The most dangerous man in the world..."
From: jackburton-ga on 01 Feb 2005 06:34 PST |
Could it be this quote...? "If a little knowledge is dangerous, where is the man who has so much as to be out of danger?" |
Subject:
Re: Source of the quotation: "The most dangerous man in the world..."
From: jh963-ga on 01 Feb 2005 09:08 PST |
>> "If a little knowledge is dangerous, where is the man who has so much as to be out of danger?" No, that's not it. The quote I'm looking for deals more with fanaticism -- someone who, despite any evidence, despite any counter opinion, is absolutely and fanatically sure they are right. |
Subject:
Re: Source of the quotation: "The most dangerous man in the world..."
From: adiusa-ga on 01 Feb 2005 09:36 PST |
This is the closest one I found. "Only the madman is absolutely sure." by Robert Anton Wilson from www.quotationspage.com There might be more. Might be find in the Bible something similar. -Adi |
Subject:
Re: Source of the quotation: "The most dangerous man in the world..."
From: jackburton-ga on 01 Feb 2005 09:58 PST |
I think this might be the one... "The most dangerous man in the world is the contemplative who is guided by nobody. He trusts his own visions. He obeys the attractions of an interior voice but will not listen to other men. (..)" |
Subject:
Re: Source of the quotation: "The most dangerous man in the world..."
From: markj-ga on 04 Feb 2005 10:02 PST |
I suspect that you might be remembering a paraphrase of Socrates's view about ignorance of one's own ignorance. Here is the relevant excerpt from Plato's Dialogue, "Alcibiades I": "SOCRATES. So who are the ones making mistakes? For they are not the ones who know. "ALCIBIADES. Of course not. "SO. And since it is neither the ones who know nor the ones who do not know knowing that they have not known it, are the others left the ones who do not know, but think they know? "ALC. None, but these. "SO. Then this ignorance is a cause of evils and the shameful kind of stupidity? "ALC. Yes. "SO. Thus when it is about the greatest things, then it is most harmful and shameful? "ALC. By far." Sanderson Beck: Plato's Alcibiades http://www.san.beck.org/Alcibiades.html Here is the way University of Toronto philosophy professor D.S. Hutchnson pithily describes Socrates's view of ignorance: "Remember what Socrates has said about ignorance. The most dangerous person is the one that thinks they know things they do not know." U. of Toronto: History of Western Philosphy http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~phl102y/nq9-24.html |
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