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Jacques Maritain Quotes

French philosopher and author (d. 1973), Birth: 18-11-1882 Jacques Maritain Quotes
1.
Americans seem sometimes to believe that if you are a thinker you must be a frowning bore, because thinking is so dam serious.
Jacques Maritain

2.
Absolute atheism starts in an act of faith in reverse gear and is a full-blown religious commitment. Here we have the first internal inconsistency of contemporary atheism: it proclaims that all religion must necessarily vanish away, and it is itself a religious phenomenon.
Jacques Maritain

3.
Gratitude is the most exquisite form of courtesy.
Jacques Maritain

4.
God does not ask for 'religious' art or 'Catholic' art. The art he wants for himself is Art, with all its teeth
Jacques Maritain

5.
Let us not go faster than God. It is our emptiness and our thirst that He needs, not our plentitude.
Jacques Maritain

Similar Authors: Ralph Waldo Emerson Swami Vivekananda Noam Chomsky Charles Spurgeon Stephen King Winston Churchill Bertrand Russell Richelle Mead Jodi Picoult Francois de La Rochefoucauld Marianne Williamson Ayn Rand Wayne Dyer Michel de Montaigne Suzanne Collins
6.
We do not need a truth to serve us, we need a truth that we can serve
Jacques Maritain

7.
If it is correct to say that there will always be rightist temperaments and leftist temperaments, it is nevertheless also correct to say that political philosophy is neither rightist nor leftist; it must simply be true .
Jacques Maritain

8.
Some truths are seen better through tears.
Jacques Maritain

Quote Topics by Jacques Maritain: Men Art Philosophy Mean Religious Love Is Doe Believe Atheist Intellectual Lying Philosopher Desire Christian World Science Mind Artist Gratitude Running Spiritual Creativity Thinking Needs America Faith Civilization Modern Saint Minimum
9.
Christianity taught men that love is worth more than intelligence.
Jacques Maritain

10.
Everywhere in the world the industrial regime tends to make the unorganized or unorganizable individual, the pauper, into the victim of a kind of human sacrifice offered to the gods of civilization.
Jacques Maritain

11.
The aim of education is to guide young persons in the process through which they shape themselves as human persons-armed with knowledge, strength of judgment, and moral virtues-while at the same time conveying to them the spiritual heritage of the nation and the civilization in which they are involved.
Jacques Maritain

12.
The tragedy of the modern democracies is that they have not yet succeeded in realizing democracy.
Jacques Maritain

13.
The first step to be taken by everyone who wishes to act morally is to decide not to act according to the general customs and doings of his fellow-men.
Jacques Maritain

14.
Not only does the democratic state of mind stem from the inspiration of the Gospel, but it cannot exist without it.
Jacques Maritain

15.
The division between the useful arts and the fine arts must not be understood in too absolute a manner. In the humblest work of the craftsmen, if art is there, there is a concern for beauty, through a kind of indirect repercussion that the requirements of the creativity of the spirit exercise upon the production of an object to serve human needs.
Jacques Maritain

16.
Since art is a virtue of the intellect, it demands to communicate with the entire universe of the intellect. Hence it is that the normal climate of art is intelligence and knowledge: its normal soil, the civilized heritage of a consistent and integrated system of beliefs and values; its normal horizon , the infinity of human experience enlighted by the passionate insight of anguish or the intellectual virtues of a contemplative mind.
Jacques Maritain

17.
Since science's competence extends to observable and measurable phenomena, not to the inner being of things, and to the means, not to the ends of human life, it would be nonsense to expect that the progress of science will provide men with a new type of metaphysics, ethics, or religion.
Jacques Maritain

18.
A single idea, if it is right, saves us the labor of an infinity of experiences.
Jacques Maritain

19.
There is room neither for the poet nor for the contemplator in an egalitarian world.
Jacques Maritain

20.
Every work of art reaches man in his inner powers. It reaches him more profoundly and insidiously than any rational proposition, either cogent demonstration or sophistry. For it strikes him with two terrible weapons, Intuition and Beauty, and at the single root in him of all his energies... Art and Poetry awaken the dreams of man, and his longings, and reveal to him some of the abysses he has in himself.
Jacques Maritain

21.
Nothing is more human than for man to desire naturally things impossible to his nature. It is, indeed, the property of a nature which is not closed up in matter like the nature of physical things, but which is intellectual or infinitized by the spirit. It is the property of a metaphysical nature. Such desires reach for the infinite, because the intellect thirsts for being and being is infinite.
Jacques Maritain

22.
Western humanism has religious and transcendent sources without which it is incomprehensible to itself.
Jacques Maritain

23.
In point of fact, Western philosophy has never set itself free of Christianity: wherever Christianity did not have a hand in the construction of modern philosophy it served instead as a stumbling block.
Jacques Maritain

24.
I don't see America as a mainland, but as a sea, a big ocean. Sometimes a storm arises, a formidable current develops, and it seems it will engulf everything. Wait a moment, another current will appear and bring the first one to naught.
Jacques Maritain

25.
To redeem creation the saint wages war on the entire fabric of creation, with the bare weapons of truth and love.
Jacques Maritain

26.
God's love causes the beauty of what He loves, our love is caused by the beauty of what we love.
Jacques Maritain

27.
The only artist who does not deserve respect is the one who works to please the public, for commercial success or for official success.
Jacques Maritain

28.
A man of courage flees forward in the midst of new things.
Jacques Maritain

29.
There is nothing man desires more than a heroic life: there is nothing less common to men than heroism.
Jacques Maritain

30.
Absolute atheism starts in an act of faith in reverse gear and is a full-blown religious commitment.
Jacques Maritain

31.
The more the poet grows, the deeper the level of creative intuition descends into the density of his soul. Where formerly he could be moved to song, he can do nothing now, he must dig deeper.
Jacques Maritain

32.
The philosopher says that God's knowledge is the measure of things, and that things are the measure of man's knowledge.
Jacques Maritain

33.
A true Christian is a man who never for a moment forgets what God has done for him in Christ and whose whole comportment and whose activity have their root in the sentiment of gratitude.
Jacques Maritain

34.
To philosophize man must put his whole soul into play, in much the same manner that to run he must use his heart and lungs.
Jacques Maritain

35.
Nothing is more vain than to seek to unite men by a philosophic minimum.
Jacques Maritain

36.
It is necessary that the object that the artist is shaping, whether it be a vase of clay or a fishing boat, be significant of something other than itself. This object must be a sign as well as an object; a meaning must animate it, and make it say more than it is.
Jacques Maritain

37.
The love of Americans for their country is not an indulgent, it is an exacting and chastising love; they cannot tolerate its defects.
Jacques Maritain

38.
Thus society is born, as something required by nature, and (because this nature is human nature) as something accomplished through a work of reason and will, and freely consented to. Man is a political animal, which means that the human person craves political life, communal life, not only with regard to the family community, but with regard to the civil community.
Jacques Maritain

39.
It is implanted in the Christian soul, by the side of the running waters, under the sky of the theological virtues, amid the breaths of the seven gifts of the Spirit. It is natural for it to bear Christian fruit.
Jacques Maritain

40.
What makes man most unhappy is to be deprived not of that which he had, but of that which he did not have, and did not really know.
Jacques Maritain

41.
The great and admirable strength of America consists in this, that America is truly the American people.
Jacques Maritain

42.
Whereas the intelligence of God is both the cause and the measure of the truth of things, things are both the cause and the measure of the truth of our intelligence.
Jacques Maritain

43.
There is no question that the language of "felt thought" must be quarried from our personal depths. Like the best gold, it does not lie on the surface.
Jacques Maritain

44.
The poet knows himself only on the condition that things resound in him, and that in him, at a single awakening, they and he come forth together out of sleep.
Jacques Maritain

45.
Authority and power are two different things: power is the force by means of which you can oblige others to obey you. Authority is the right to direct and command, to be listened to or obeyed by others. Authority requests power. Power without authority is tyranny.
Jacques Maritain

46.
The spiritual experience of the philosopher is the nourishing soil of philosophy; that without it there is no philosophy; and that, even so, spiritual experience does not, or must not, enter into the intelligible texture of philosophy. The pulp of the fruit must consist of nothing but the truth.
Jacques Maritain

47.
The equality of rights of all citizens is the basic tenet of modern democratic societies.
Jacques Maritain

48.
It is impossible for a Christian to be a relativist.
Jacques Maritain

49.
Poetry proceeds from the totality of man, sense, imagination, intellect, love, desire, instinct, blood and spirit together.
Jacques Maritain

50.
That is why I think, in defiance of Plato, that there is at once error and vulgarity in saying that poetry is a lie, except in the sense that Cocteau wrote one day: I am a lie who always tells the truth. The only poetry which lies purely and simply is academic, pseudo-classical, conceptually repetitive poetry, and it is not poetry.
Jacques Maritain