Thomas H. Huxley Quotes

Thomas H. Huxley Quotes. Below is a collection of famous Thomas H. Huxley quotes. Here you can find the most popular and greatest quotes by Thomas H. Huxley. Share these quotations with your friends and family.

Try to learn something about everything and everything about something.

By Thomas H. Huxley
The world makes up for all its follies and injustices by being damnably sentimental.

By Thomas H. Huxley
The strongest man in the world is the man who stands alone.

By Thomas H. Huxley
The deepest sin against the human mind is to believe things without evidence.

By Thomas H. Huxley
Science comits suicide when it adopts a creed.

By Thomas H. Huxley
Perhaps the most valuable result of all education is the ability to make yourself do the thing you have to do, when it ought to be done, whether you like it or not.

By Thomas H. Huxley
Only a scientific people can survive in a scientific future.

By Thomas H. Huxley
Only one absolute certainty is possible to man, namely that at any given moment the feeling which he has exists.

By Thomas H. Huxley
It is not who is right, but what is right, that is of importance.

By Thomas H. Huxley
It is an error to imagine that evolution signifies a constant tendency to increased perfection. That process undoubtedly involves a constant remodelling of the organism in adaptation to new conditions; but it depends on the nature of those conditions whether the directions of the modifications effected shall be upward or downward.

By Thomas H. Huxley
If a little knowledge is dangerous, where is the man who has so much as to be out of danger.

By Thomas H. Huxley
I have no faith, very little hope, and as much charity as I can afford.

By Thomas H. Huxley
God give me strength to face a fact though it slay me.

By Thomas H. Huxley
Agnosticism simply means that a man shall not say he knows or believes that for which he has no grounds for professing to believe.

By Thomas H. Huxley
Make up your mind to act decidedly and take the consequences. No good is ever done in this world by hesitation.

By Thomas H. Huxley
Every great advance in natural knowledge has involved the absolute rejection of authority.

By Thomas H. Huxley
There is no greater mistake than the hasty conclusion that opinions are worthless because they are badly argued.

By Thomas H. Huxley