“Most men of education are more superstitious than they admit - nay than they think.”
G. C. Lichtenberg“Bad writers are those who try to express their own feeble ideas in the language of good ones.”
G. C. Lichtenberg“One can live in this world on soothsaying but not on truth saying.”
G. C. Lichtenberg“With most people doubt about one thing is simply blind belief in another.”
G. C. Lichtenberg“He who is in love with himself has at least this advantage he won't encounter many rivals.”
G. C. Lichtenberg“The lower classes of men though they do not think it worthwhile to record what they perceive nevertheless perceive everything that is worth noting the difference between them and a man of learning often consists in nothing more than the latter's facility for expression.”
G. C. Lichtenberg“Every man has his moral backside too which he doesn't expose unnecessarily but keeps covered as long as possible by the trousers of decorum.”
G. C. Lichtenberg“Everyone is a genius at least once a year a real genius has his original ideas closer together.”
G. C. Lichtenberg“Sometimes men come by the name of genius in the same way that certain insects come by the name of centipede - not because they have a hundred feet but because most people can't count above fourteen.”
G. C. Lichtenberg“Most men of education are more superstitious than they admit - nay than they think.”
G. C. Lichtenberg