John W. Gardner

John William Gardner was President of the Carnegie Corporation and Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare under President Lyndon Johnson.

Sourced

  • The society which scorns excellence in plumbing as a humble activity and tolerates shoddiness in philosophy because it is an exalted activity will have neither good plumbing nor good philosophy: neither its pipes nor its theories will hold water.
    • Excellence: Can We Be Equal and Excellent Too? (1961)

  • Tax reduction has an almost irresitible appeal to the politician, and it is no doubt also gratifying to the citizen. It means more dollars in his pocket, dollars that he can spend if inflation doesn't consume them first. But dollars in his pocket won't buy him clean streets or an adequate police force or good schools or clear air and water. Handing money back to the private sector in tax cuts and starving the public sector is a formula for producing richer and richer consumers in filthier and filthier communities. If we stick to that formula we shall end up in affluent misery.
    • The Recovery of Confidence (1970)

  • Life is the art of drawing without an eraser.
    • Quoted in "Cracking the Code of Our Physical Universe" - Page 269 - by Matthew M. Radmanesh

  • History never looks like history when you are living through it.
    • Quoted in "The International Thesaurus of Quotations" - Page 280 - by Rhoda Thomas Tripp - 1970

  • We have to face the fact that most men and women out there are more stale than they know, more bored than they care to admit.
    • Quoted in "Self Renewal" (1964)

Unsourced

  • "It is hard to feel individually responsible with respect to the invisible processes of a huge and distant government."

  • "Josh Billings said, 'It is not only the most difficult thing to know oneself, but the most inconvenient one, too.' Human beings have always employed an enormous variety of clever devices for running away from themselves, and the modern world is particularly rich in such stratagems."

  • "One of the reasons people stop learning is that they become less and less willing to risk failure."

  • "Men of integrity, by their very existence, rekindle the belief that as a people we can live above the level of moral squalor. We need that belief; a cynical community is a corrupt community."

  • "Self-pity is easily the most destructive of the nonpharmaceutical narcotics; it is addictive, gives momentary pleasure and separates the victim from reality."

  • "Political extremism involves two prime ingredients: an excessively simple diagnosis of the world's ills, and a conviction that there are identifiable villains back of it all."

  • "The creative individual has the capacity to free himself from the web of social pressures in which the rest of us are caught. He is capable of questioning the assumptions that the rest of us accept."

  • "The cynic says, 'One man can't do anything.' I say, 'Only one man can do anything.'"

  • "The ultimate goal of the educational system is to shift to the individual the burden of pursing his own education. This will not be a widely shared pursuit until we get over our odd conviction that education is what goes on in school buildings and nowhere else."

  • "Whoever I am, or whatever I am doing, some kind of excellence is within my reach."

  • When Alexander the Great visited Diogenes and asked whether he could do anything for the famed teacher, Diogenes replied: ‘Only stand out of my light.’ Perhaps some day we shall know how to heighten creativity. Until then, one of the best things we can do for creative men and women is to stand out of their light.
 
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