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Daily Inspiration Quote by Baruch Spinoza

"All noble things are as difficult as they are rare"

About this Quote

Spinoza lands the line like a cold consolation prize: if what you want is genuinely noble, expect it to be scarce and stubbornly hard. The sentence has the clean geometry of his philosophy, turning moral aspiration into something closer to a law of nature. Nobility isn’t romanticized; it’s priced. Difficulty becomes evidence that the thing is real, and rarity becomes proof that most people will settle for cheaper substitutes.

The subtext is quietly anti-heroic. Spinoza isn’t praising suffering for its own sake; he’s warning you not to mistake ease for virtue. In the Ethics, salvation is not a dramatic conversion but a rigorous re-training of the mind: learning to understand necessity, to loosen the grip of passions like envy or resentment, to replace superstition with clear ideas. That’s difficult because it cuts against our default settings. Humans are built to react, to personalize, to chase immediate rewards. A “noble thing” in Spinoza’s world is a stable power of acting and understanding - and that stability is rare because it requires sustained self-governance.

Context sharpens the edge. Spinoza wrote as a kind of philosophical exile, cast out by his community, living under the shadow of religious and political intolerance. “Noble” here is not social status; it’s intellectual and ethical freedom. The line doubles as a defense mechanism against despair: if you’re not finding serenity, rational love, or genuine autonomy easily, that’s not personal failure. That’s the admission price.

Quote Details

TopicWisdom
Source
Verified source: Ethics (Baruch Spinoza, 1677)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
But all things excellent are as difficult as they are rare. (Part V, Proposition XLII, Scholium (final sentence of the work)). This is the closing line of Spinoza's Ethica (Ethics). The commonly-circulated wording 'All noble things are as difficult as they are rare' is a variant paraphrase of the same line (often translated 'excellent'/'noble'/'fine'). In the Latin text it is widely given as: "Sed omnia praeclara tam difficilia, quam rara sunt." The first publication of Ethics was posthumous in 1677 (published within Spinoza's Opera posthuma). The Project Gutenberg text is Elwes's English translation and locates the sentence at the end of Part V (Prop. XLII, Scholium).
Other candidates (1)
Speculum Spinozanum, 1677-1977 (Siegfried Hessing, 2019) compilation95.0%
... all noble things are as difficult as they are rare . Baruch de Spinoza It is a great joy to realize that the path...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Spinoza, Baruch. (2026, February 9). All noble things are as difficult as they are rare. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/all-noble-things-are-as-difficult-as-they-are-rare-62884/

Chicago Style
Spinoza, Baruch. "All noble things are as difficult as they are rare." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/all-noble-things-are-as-difficult-as-they-are-rare-62884/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"All noble things are as difficult as they are rare." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/all-noble-things-are-as-difficult-as-they-are-rare-62884/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

Baruch Spinoza

Baruch Spinoza (November 24, 1632 - February 21, 1677) was a Philosopher from Netherland.

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