
On Thinking for Oneself

A library may be very large; but if it is in disorder, it is not so useful as one that is small but well arranged.
Arthur Schopenhauer • On Thinking for Oneself
So it is, that much reading deprives the mind of all elasticity; it is like keeping a spring continually under pressure. The safest way of having no thoughts of one’s own is to take up a book every moment one has nothing else to do. It is this practice which explains why erudition makes most men more stupid and silly than they are by nature, and pr
... See moreArthur Schopenhauer • On Thinking for Oneself
Those who have spent their lives in reading, and taken their wisdom from books, are like people who have obtained precise information about a country from the descriptions of many travellers. Such people can tell a great deal about it; but, after all, they have no connected, clear, and profound knowledge of its real condition. But those who have sp
... See moreArthur Schopenhauer • On Thinking for Oneself
The man who thinks for himself, forms his own opinions and learns the authorities for them only later on, when they serve but to strengthen his belief in them and in himself. But the book-philosopher starts from the authorities. He reads other people’s books, collects their opinions, and so forms a whole for himself, which resembles an automaton ma
... See moreArthur Schopenhauer • On Thinking for Oneself
Makes me think about the proverbial quotes stuck on the fridge. The proverbs and idioms hanging on the wall.
Reading and learning are things that anyone can do of his own free will; but not so thinking. Thinking must be kindled, like a fire by a draught; it must be sustained by some interest in the matter in hand. This interest may be of purely objective kind, or merely subjective. The latter comes into play only in things that concern us personally. Obje
... See moreArthur Schopenhauer • On Thinking for Oneself
Contrarily, he who thinks for himself creates a work like a living man as made by Nature. For the work comes into being as a man does; the thinking mind is impregnated from without, and it then forms and bears its child.
Arthur Schopenhauer • On Thinking for Oneself
Reading is thinking with some one else’s head instead of one’s own.
Arthur Schopenhauer • On Thinking for Oneself
In the real world, be it never so fair, favorable and pleasant, we always live subject to the law of gravity which we have to be constantly overcoming. But in the world of intellect we are disembodied spirits, held in bondage to no such law, and free from penury and distress. Thus it is that there exists no happiness on earth like that which, at th
... See moreArthur Schopenhauer • On Thinking for Oneself
Reading is nothing more than a substitute for thought of one’s own. It means putting the mind into leading-strings. The multitude of books serves only to show how many false paths there are, and how widely astray a man may wander if he follows any of them. But he who is guided by his genius, he who thinks for himself, who thinks spontaneously and e
... See more