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Quotes about Intellect

Simplicity is an intellectual achievement, one of the greatest.
— Dietrich Bonhoeffer
When spirituality is divorced from theology it speedily deteriorates into sentimentality.
— Donald Bloesch
This question the Dodo could not answer without a great deal of thought, and it stood for a long time with one finger pressed upon its forehead (the position in which you usually see Shakespeare, in the pictures of him), while the rest waited in silence.
— Lewis Carroll
The Christian faith is ultimately not only a matter of doctrine or understanding or of intellect, it is a condition of the heart.
— Martyn Lloyd-Jones
The most dangerous condition for a man or a nation is when his intellectual side is more developed than his spiritual. Is that not exactly the condition of the world today?
— Arthur Conan Doyle
We should take care not to make the intellect our god; it has, of course, powerful muscles, but no personality.
— Albert Einstein
Most people say that it is the intellect which makes a great scientist. They are wrong: it is character.
— Albert Einstein
How did it come to pass that I was the one to develop the theory of relativity? The reason, I think, is that a normal adult never stops to think about problems of space and time. These are things which he has thought of as a child. But my intellectual development was retarded, as a result of which I began to wonder about space and time only when I had already grown up. Naturally I could go deeper into the problem than a child with normal abilities.
— Albert Einstein
The only thing you absolutely have to know, is the location of the library.
— Albert Einstein
New ideas are reasonable if they can be fitted into an already familiar scheme, unreasonable if they cannot be made to fit. Our intellectual prejudices determine the channels along which our reason shall flow.
— Aldous Huxley
Books, he said—books. One reads so many, and one sees so few people and so little of the world. Great thick books about the universe and the mind and ethics. You've no idea how many there are. I must have read twenty or thirty tons of them in the last five years. Twenty tons of ratiocination. Weighted with that, one's pushed out into the world.
— Aldous Huxley
Though the intellect remains unimpaired and though perception is enormously improved, the will suffers a profound change for the worse. The mescalin taker sees no reason for doing aanything in particular and finds most of the causes for which, at ordinary times, he was prepared to act and suffer, profoundly uninteresting. He can't be bothered with them, for the good reason that he has better things to think about.
— Aldous Huxley