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Quotes

The great difficulty in education is to get experience out of ideas.

—George Santayana, 1905

It is a greater advantage to be honestly educated than honorably born.

—Erasmus, 1518

In the first place God made idiots. This was for practice. Then he made school boards.

—Mark Twain, 1897

A whale ship was my Yale College and my Harvard.

—Herman Melville, 1851

A fool’s brain digests philosophy into folly, science into superstition, and art into pedantry. Hence university education.

—George Bernard Shaw, 1903

The Founding Fathers in their wisdom decided that children were an unnatural strain on parents. So they provided jails called schools, equipped with tortures called an education. School is where you go between when your parents can’t take you and industry can’t take you. 

—John Updike, 1963

Anyone who has a child should train him to be either a physicist or a ballet dancer. Then he’ll escape.

—W.H. Auden, 1947

Give us the child for eight years and it will be a Bolshevist forever.

—Vladimir Lenin, 1923

Education is a weapon whose effects depend on who holds it in his hands and at whom it is aimed.

—Joseph Stalin, 1934

Real education must ultimately be limited to men who insist on knowing—the rest is mere sheep herding.

—Ezra Pound, 1934

It is not light that we need, but fire; it is not the gentle shower, but thunder. We need the storm, the whirlwind, and the earthquake.

—Frederick Douglass, 1852

Anyone who has passed through the regular gradations of a classical education, and is not made a fool by it, may consider himself as having had a very narrow escape.

—William Hazlitt, 1821

Spoon feeding in the long run teaches us nothing but the shape of the spoon.

—E.M. Forster, 1951