Experience

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Experience as a general concept comprises knowledge of or skill in or observation of some thing or some event gained through involvement in or exposure to that thing or event.

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  • Experience keeps a dear school, but fools will learn in no other.
  • The experience of every past moment but belies the faith of each present.
    • Henry David Thoreau, Letter to Lidian Jackson Emerson (June 20, 1843); in The Writings of Henry David Thoreau, vol. 6, p. 88, Houghton Mifflin (1906)
  • Experience is never limited, and it is never complete; it is an immense sensibility, a kind of huge spider-web of the finest silken threads suspended in the chamber of consciousness, and catching every air-borne particle in its tissue.
  • Experience comprises illusions lost, rather than wisdom gained.
    • Joseph Roux, Meditations of a Parish Priest, pt. 4, no. 28 (1886)
  • Experience. The wisdom that enables us to recognise in an undesirable old acquaintance the folly that we have already embraced.
  • Experience is a good teacher, but she sends in terrific bills.
    • Minna Antrim, Naked Truth and Veiled Allusions, p. 99 (1901)
  • ...what we call education and culture is for the most part nothing but the substitution of reading for experience, of literature for life, [and] of the obsolete fictitious for the contemporary real...
  • ‘Pure experience’ is the name I gave to the immediate flux of life which furnishes the material to our later reflection with its conceptual categories.
    • William James, The Thing and Its Relations, Essays in Radical Empiricism (1912)
  • Every experience is a paradox in that it means to be absolute, and yet is relative; in that it somehow always goes beyond itself and yet never escapes itself.
    • T. S. Eliot, Eliot’s doctoral dissertation in philosophy; submitted to Harvard in 1916. Knowledge and Experience in the Philosophy of F.H. Bradley, ch. 7, Columbia University Press (1964).
  • Experience is not a matter of having actually swum the Hellespont, or danced with the dervishes, or slept in a doss-house. It is a matter of sensibility and intuition, of seeing and hearing the significant things, of paying attention at the right moments, of understanding and coordinating. Experience is not what happens to a man; it is what a man does with what happens to him.
  • Experience is a mere whiff or rumble, produced by enormously complex and ill-deciphered causes of experience; and in the other direction, experience is a mere peephole through which glimpses come down to us of eternal things.
    • George Santayana, Letter to the Marchesa Iris Origo (May 1933) The Letters of George Santayana, ed. Daniel Cory (1955).
  • Experience is the cane of the blind.
    • Jacques Roumain, Masters of the Dew, p. 83, Les Éditeurs Français Réunis (1946)
  • Experience is a private, and a very largely speechless affair.
    • James Baldwin, In Notes of a Native Son (1955). “A Question of Identity,” Partisan Review (New Brunswick, New Jersey, July/August 1954).
  • Experience is a dim lamp, which only lights the one who bears it.
  • Experience can be merely the repetition of same error often enough.
    • John G. Azzopardi, Problems in Breast Pathology, W.B. Saunders Company Ltd London . Philadelphia - Toronto, p. 113 (1979)
  • Experience needs distance and what you write of at a distance tells not so much what you were like as what you have discovered since.
    • David Wade, On the BBC production I, William Shakespeare, London Times (May 8, 1982)
  • Experience is a great spoiler of pleasures.
    • Mason Cooley, City Aphorisms, Fourth Selection, New York (1987)

[edit] Unsourced

  • Experience is not always the kindest of teachers, but it is surely the best.
  • Good judgment comes from experience. Experience comes from bad judgment.
  • Only the foolish learn from experience - the wise learn from the experience of others.
    • Attributed to Romanian folk wisdom as recorded by Rolf Hochhuth
  • Past experience, if not forgotten, is a guide to the future.
  • Refusal to believe until proof is given is a rational position; denial of all outside of our own limited experience is absurd.
    • Annie Besant
    • Quoted in Theodore Schick and Lewis Vaughn: How to Think about Weird Things: Critical Thinking for a New Age. Boston, McGraw Hill, 2002 (3rd edition), page 121
  • Playing Solitaire is a journey.
    • Anonymous
    • Quoted in a leading Australian high school; needs verification.

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