Pedantry Quotes

On this page you will find all the quotes on the topic "Pedantry". There are currently 62 quotes in our collection about Pedantry. Discover the TOP 10 sayings about Pedantry!
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  • Pedants make a great rout about criticism, as if it were a science of great depth, and required much pains and knowledge--criticism however is only the result of good sense, taste and judgment--three qualities that indeed seldom are found together, and extremely seldom in a pedant, which most critics are.

  • The pulpit style of Germany has been always rustically negligent, or bristling with pedantry.

    Style   Germany   Pulpit  
  • 'Tis well enough for a servant to be bred at an University. But the education is a little too pedantic for a gentleman.

    'Love for Love' (1695) act 5, sc. 3
  • One thing must be avoided at all costs: narrow-mindedness, pedantry, dull pettiness.

    Cost   Dull   Avoided  
  • Pedantry is properly the over-rating of any kind of knowledge we pretend to.

    Kind   Rating   Pedantry  
    Jonathan Swift (1857). “The works of Dean Swift: comprising A tale of a tub, The battle of the books, with thoughts and essays on various subjects, together with The Dean's advice to a young lady on her marriage”, p.268
  • All that was great in the past was ridiculed, condemned, combated, suppressed — only to emerge all the more powerfully, all the more triumphantly from the struggle.

    Nikola Tesla (2013). “The Wireless Tesla”, p.24, Simon and Schuster
  • A pedant holds more to instruct us with what he knows, than of what we are ignorant.

  • Sometimes I think that no situation actually fits the technical definition of irony, and that the word just sort of hangs out in the linguistic ether singing a Siren song that's designed to crash the unsuspecting against the jagged rocks of pedantry.

    Song   Thinking   Rocks  
  • Though pedantry denies, It's plain the Bible means That Solomon grew wise While talking with his queens.

    Wise   Queens   Women  
    William Butler Yeats (1931). “Later Poems”, p.110, Library of Alexandria
  • contempt for the degradation of specialization and pedantry. Specialization develops only part of a man; a man partially developed is deformed.

    Richard M. Weaver (2013). “Ideas Have Consequences”, p.56, University of Chicago Press
  • A good designer must rely on experience, on precise, logic thinking; and on pedantic exactness. No magic will do.

    Death   Thinking   Design  
    Interview with Carlo Pescio, www.eptacom.net. June 1997.
  • Pedantry prides herself on being wrong by rules; while common sense is contented to be right without them.

    Charles Caleb Colton (1824). “Lacon, Or, Many Things in a Few Words: Addressed to Those who Think”, p.35
  • Lust," she said. "Lust is a deadly sin." "And spanking." "I think that falls under lust." "I think it should have its own category." said Jace

    Cassandra Clare (2014). “City of Lost Souls”, p.219, Simon and Schuster
  • For an author to write as he speaks is just as reprehensible as the opposite fault, to speak as he writes; for this gives a pedantic effect to what he says, and at the same time makes him hardly intelligible.

    Arthur Schopenhauer (2015). “The Art of Literature: Top of Schopenhauer”, p.18, 谷月社
  • Of course, we can distinguish between males and females; we can also, if we choose, distinguish between different age categories; but any more advanced distinction comes close to pedantry, probably a result of boredom. A creature that is bored elaborates distinctions and hierarchies. According to Hutchinson and Rawlins, the development of systems of hierarchical dominance within animal societies does not correspond to any practical necessity, nor to any selective advantage; it simply constitutes a means of combating the crushing boredom of life in the heart of nature.

    Crush   Heart   Mean  
  • A taxonomy of abilities, like a taxonomy anywhere else in science, is apt to strike a certain type of impatient student as a gratuitous orgy of pedantry. Doubtless, compulsions to intellectual tidiness express themselves prematurely at times, and excessively at others, but a good descriptive taxonomy, as Darwin found in developing his theory, and as Newton found in the work of Kepler, is the mother of laws and theories.

    "Intelligence: Its Structure, Growth and Action". Book by Raymond Cattell (p. 61), 1987.
  • Pedants, who have the least knowledge to be proud of, are impelled most by vanity.

    Vanity   Proud   Pedants  
  • The most annoying of all blockheads is a well-read fool.

    Fool   Annoying   Wells  
  • Learning, like traveling and all other methods of improvement, as it finishes good sense, so it makes a silly man ten thousand times more insufferable by supplying variety of matter to his impertinence, and giving him an opportunity of abounding in absurdities.

    Silly   Opportunity   Men  
    Joseph Addison (2010). “Addison's Essays”, p.133, Wildside Press LLC
  • Do you call it doubting to write down on a piece of paper that you doubt? If so, doubt has nothing to do with any serious business. But do not make believe; if pedantry has not eaten all the reality out of you, recognize, as you must, that there is much that you do not doubt, in the least. Now that which you do not at all doubt, you must and do regard as infallible, absolute truth.

    Charles Sanders Peirce (1958). “Selected Writings (Values in a Universe of Chance)”, p.188, Courier Corporation
  • Nature avenges herself speedily on the hard pedantry that would chain her waves. She is no literalist. Every thing must be taken genially, and we must be at the top of our condition, to understand any thing rightly.

    Ralph Waldo Emerson (2013). “Delphi Complete Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson (Illustrated)”, p.1588, Delphi Classics
  • Learning has always been made much of, but forgetting has always been deprecated; therefore pedantry has pretty well established itself throughout the modern world at the expense of culture.

    Culture   World   Pedants  
  • The tone of good conversation is brilliant and natural; it is neither tedious nor frivolous; it is instructive without pedantry, gay without tumultuousness, polished without affectation, gallant without insipidity, waggish without equivocation.

    Gay   Tone   Brilliant  
  • Pedantry, in the common acceptation of the word, means an absurd ostentation of learning, and stiffness of phraseology, proceeding from a misguided knowledge of books and a total ignorance of men.

    Book   Ignorance   Mean  
  • This is the type of arrant pedantry up with which I will not put.

    Wall Street Journal, December 9, 1948.
  • Also, what mountains of dead ashes, wreck and burnt bones, does assiduous pedantry dig up from the past time and name it History.

    Past   Names   History  
    Thomas Carlyle (1843). “Past and Present”, p.36
  • Shall we then judge a country by the majority, or by the minority? By the minority, surely. 'Tis pedantry to estimate nations by the census, or by square miles of land, or other than by their importance to the mind of the time.

    Country   Land   Squares  
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1983). “Essays and Lectures”, p.1081, Library of America
  • To be exact has naught to do with pedantry or dogma.

    Dogma   Pedantry  
  • My readers, who may at first be apt to consider Quotation as downright pedantry, will be surprised when I assure them, that next to the simple imitation of sounds and gestures, Quotation is the most natural and most frequent habitude of human nature. For, Quotation must not be confined to passages adduced out of authors. He who cites the opinion, or remark, or saying of another, whether it has been written or spoken, is certainly one who quotes; and this we shall find to be universally practiced.

    Simple   Next   Firsts  
  • Shall we then judge a country by the majority, or by the minority? By the minority, surely.

    Country   Pride   Gay  
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (2013). “Delphi Complete Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson (Illustrated)”, p.2360, Delphi Classics
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