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Daily Inspiration Quote by Oscar Wilde

"An idea that is not dangerous is unworthy of being called an idea at all"

About this Quote

Danger is Wilde's quality test for thought: if an "idea" can't threaten anything, it's just decoration. Coming from a dramatist who made a career out of turning polite conversation into a weapon, the line is less a manifesto for chaos than a jab at Victorian respectability and the fake safety of "good taste". Wilde understood that the age's prized virtues - propriety, moral certainty, social order - were enforced through boredom and shame as much as through law. A harmless idea is one that has already been domesticated by that machinery.

The phrasing is doing sly work. "Unworthy" isn't merely descriptive; it's snobbish. Wilde elevates intellectual risk the way his characters elevate style: as a marker of seriousness and status. He also flips the burden of proof. Instead of asking whether a provocative thought is responsible, he asks whether a safe thought deserves the name at all. That reversal is classic Wilde: a paradox that looks like a joke until you realize it's a moral critique.

Context matters because Wilde's own life became the proof of concept. His aestheticism, his open flirtations with taboo, his insistence on living as art - these weren't abstractions. They collided with the legal and social order that ultimately prosecuted him. Read against that backdrop, "dangerous" doesn't mean violent; it means socially combustible: capable of rearranging who gets to speak, desire, and define virtue.

The subtext is an accusation: if your ideas never endanger your comfort, you're not thinking - you're complying. Wilde isn't romanticizing peril for its own sake; he's reminding you that genuine insight has consequences, and consequence is how you tell it isn't counterfeit.

Quote Details

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Source
Verified source: The True Function and Value of Criticism (Oscar Wilde, 1890)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
An idea that is not dangerous is unworthy of being called an idea at all.. This line appears in Oscar Wilde’s dialogue-essay "The Critic as Artist" (later collected in Intentions). However, the work was first published earlier under the title "The True Function and Value of Criticism; with some Remarks on the Importance of Doing Nothing: A Dialogue" in The Nineteenth Century (published in two parts: July 1890 and September 1890). The quote occurs in the passage: “...whereas it is only such theories that have any true intellectual value. An idea that is not dangerous is unworthy of being called an idea at all.” The Project Gutenberg text (based on a later Methuen edition) reproduces the wording reliably, but it does not preserve the original 1890 magazine pagination. For a page number in Wilde’s later book publication, the quote also appears in Intentions (1891) within "The Critic as Artist"; exact page varies by edition (e.g., many quote sites cite later Methuen printings, not the 1891 first edition).
Other candidates (1)
The Complete Works of Oscar Wilde (Josephine M. Guy, 2007) compilation95.0%
... An idea that is not dangerous is unworthy of being called an idea at all NC idea that] idea, Ernest, that MS4 11 ...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Wilde, Oscar. (2026, February 9). An idea that is not dangerous is unworthy of being called an idea at all. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/an-idea-that-is-not-dangerous-is-unworthy-of-24942/

Chicago Style
Wilde, Oscar. "An idea that is not dangerous is unworthy of being called an idea at all." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/an-idea-that-is-not-dangerous-is-unworthy-of-24942/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"An idea that is not dangerous is unworthy of being called an idea at all." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/an-idea-that-is-not-dangerous-is-unworthy-of-24942/. Accessed 24 Feb. 2026.

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Oscar Wilde

Oscar Wilde (October 16, 1854 - November 30, 1900) was a Dramatist from Ireland.

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