It may, however, be said that the level of experience to which concepts are inapplicable cannot yield any knowledge of a universal character, for concepts alone are capable of being socialized.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
You can't afford for there to be gaps in your pool of knowledge when it comes to a character; otherwise, what ends up onscreen is generalized and unspecific.
Society cannot continue to disable themselves through their need to categorize people or make assumptions as to another individual's abilities.
Experience teaches only the teachable.
We have to realize only in communication, in real knowledge, in real reaching out, can there be an understanding that there's humanity everywhere, and that's what I'm trying to do.
The universal Mind contains all knowledge. It is the potential ultimate of all things. To it, all things are possible.
Human vocabulary is still not capable, and probably never will be, of knowing, recognizing, and communicating everything that can be humanly experienced and felt.
It is beyond a doubt that all our knowledge begins with experience.
The existence of inherent limits of experience in no way settles the question about the subordination of facts of the human world to our knowledge of matter.
I think self-knowledge is the rarest trait in a human being.
The only knowledge which satisfies us is one which is subject to no external standards but springs from the inner life of the personality.