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Daily Inspiration Quote by Charles Sanders Peirce

"Doubt is an uneasy and dissatisfied state from which we struggle to free ourselves and pass into the state of belief; while the latter is a calm and satisfactory state which we do not wish to avoid, or to change to a belief in anything else"

About this Quote

Peirce is quietly dismantling the romantic idea that doubt is a noble, permanent posture. He treats it less like a badge of sophistication and more like an irritant in the mind: a “state” that feels bad enough to force motion. The wording is clinical on purpose. Doubt isn’t heroic; it’s unstable, “uneasy,” “dissatisfied,” the kind of cognitive itch that makes you scratch until you can stop noticing it. Belief, by contrast, is framed as comfort: “calm,” “satisfactory,” something we don’t naturally want to swap out. That asymmetry is the engine of the quote. Human cognition, Peirce implies, has a built-in bias toward settling down.

The subtext is a critique of both armchair skepticism and the myth of purely rational inquiry. If belief is inherently satisfying, then our reasoning is never just a neutral pursuit of truth; it’s also an emotional quest for equilibrium. That has consequences. People don’t merely arrive at convictions; they seek them as relief. “Pass into the state of belief” sounds like crossing a threshold, and it hints at how quickly the mind will accept an answer that stills the discomfort, even if it’s flimsy.

Context matters: Peirce is writing from the pragmatist tradition, where ideas are tested by their effects and inquiry is driven by the friction of real experience. Doubt isn’t an abstract philosophical exercise; it’s what happens when the world pushes back against our habits. Read that way, the line isn’t cynicism about truth-seeking so much as a warning label: we are motivated reasoners with a craving for closure, so the ethics of inquiry requires methods that keep us honest when belief starts feeling too good.

Quote Details

TopicReason & Logic
SourceCharles Sanders Peirce, "The Fixation of Belief" (Popular Science Monthly, 1877) — opening paragraph; also reprinted in Collected Papers and The Essential Peirce.
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Peirce, Charles Sanders. (2026, January 15). Doubt is an uneasy and dissatisfied state from which we struggle to free ourselves and pass into the state of belief; while the latter is a calm and satisfactory state which we do not wish to avoid, or to change to a belief in anything else. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/doubt-is-an-uneasy-and-dissatisfied-state-from-43235/

Chicago Style
Peirce, Charles Sanders. "Doubt is an uneasy and dissatisfied state from which we struggle to free ourselves and pass into the state of belief; while the latter is a calm and satisfactory state which we do not wish to avoid, or to change to a belief in anything else." FixQuotes. January 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/doubt-is-an-uneasy-and-dissatisfied-state-from-43235/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Doubt is an uneasy and dissatisfied state from which we struggle to free ourselves and pass into the state of belief; while the latter is a calm and satisfactory state which we do not wish to avoid, or to change to a belief in anything else." FixQuotes, 15 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/doubt-is-an-uneasy-and-dissatisfied-state-from-43235/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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Peirce on Doubt and the Fixation of Belief
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About the Author

Charles Sanders Peirce

Charles Sanders Peirce (September 10, 1839 - April 19, 1914) was a Philosopher from USA.

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