Meaningful Quotes. Thoughtful Insights. Helpful Tools.
Advanced Search Options

Quotes about Learning

I am most interested in encouraging Christians to think and read well. Christians, of all people, should reflect the mind of their Maker. Learning to read well is a step toward loving God with your mind. It is a leap toward thinking God's thoughts after Him.
— James Sire
As a manager, you have to accept the fact that people will make mistakes, but not intentionally, and that mistakes are the price of learning and self-sufficiency.
— Jason Fried
Too much time in academia can actually do you harm. There are a lot of skills that are useful in academia that aren't worth much outside of it.
— Jason Fried
Failure is not a prerequisite for success.
— Jason Fried
But after that, the curve flattens out. There's surprisingly little difference between a candidate with six months of experience and one with six years. The real difference comes from the individual's dedication, personality, and intelligence.
— Jason Fried
Evolution doesn't linger on past failures, it's always building upon what worked. So should you.
— Jason Fried
Use this time to make mistakes without the whole world hearing about them. Keep tweaking. Work out the kinks. Test random ideas. Try new things. No one knows you, so it's no big deal if you mess up. Obscurity helps protect your ego and preserve your confidence.
— Jason Fried
Another common misconception: You need to learn from your mistakes. What do you really learn from mistakes? You might learn what not to do again, but how valuable is that? You still don't know what you should do next. Contrast that with learning from your successes.
— Jason Fried
People more often need to be reminded than informed.
— Samuel Johnson
Remember, life's phases are connected---yesterday feeds today.....Today's lessons are preparing us for tomorrow's assignments.
— Dutch Sheets
Her failure was a useful preliminary to success.
— Edith Wharton
Life is the only real counselor; wisdom unfiltered through personal experience does not become a part of the moral tissue.
— Edith Wharton