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Leadership Quote by Christian Lous Lange

"All species capable of grasping this fact manage better in the struggle for existence than those which rely upon their own strength alone: the wolf, which hunts in a pack, has a greater chance of survival than the lion, which hunts alone"

About this Quote

Lange slips a political argument into the clothing of nature, and he does it with the calm authority of a man who expects his audience to trust “facts” more than ideology. The wolf and the lion aren’t really about animals; they’re a parable about power. He picks the lion precisely because it’s our default symbol of greatness: solitary, regal, self-sufficient. Then he undercuts it. In Lange’s framing, the lion’s proud autonomy is a liability, while the wolf’s coordinated violence is the real evolutionary advantage. It’s an inversion aimed at cultures that romanticize the lone strongman, the self-made nation, the heroic individual.

The specific intent reads as a defense of cooperation as strategy, not sentiment. “Grasping this fact” implies a cognitive leap: survival rewards not just muscle, but the willingness to accept interdependence. That phrasing also carries a mild rebuke. If you’re still “rely[ing] upon [your] own strength alone,” you’re not noble, you’re naive.

Context matters: Lange was a Norwegian politician and leading internationalist associated with the early peace movement, later winning the Nobel Peace Prize (1921). Between imperial competition, World War I’s fallout, and the shaky architecture of the League of Nations, he’s making the case that small states and exhausted empires alike are better served by alliances, institutions, and collective security than by national bravado.

The subtext is hard-edged: cooperation isn’t the opposite of struggle; it’s how you win it.

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APA Style (7th ed.)
Lange, Christian Lous. (2026, January 15). All species capable of grasping this fact manage better in the struggle for existence than those which rely upon their own strength alone: the wolf, which hunts in a pack, has a greater chance of survival than the lion, which hunts alone. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/all-species-capable-of-grasping-this-fact-manage-32753/

Chicago Style
Lange, Christian Lous. "All species capable of grasping this fact manage better in the struggle for existence than those which rely upon their own strength alone: the wolf, which hunts in a pack, has a greater chance of survival than the lion, which hunts alone." FixQuotes. January 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/all-species-capable-of-grasping-this-fact-manage-32753/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"All species capable of grasping this fact manage better in the struggle for existence than those which rely upon their own strength alone: the wolf, which hunts in a pack, has a greater chance of survival than the lion, which hunts alone." FixQuotes, 15 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/all-species-capable-of-grasping-this-fact-manage-32753/. Accessed 4 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

Christian Lous Lange

Christian Lous Lange (September 17, 1869 - December 11, 1938) was a Politician from Norway.

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