"He who learns but does not think, is lost! He who thinks but does not learn is in great danger"
About this Quote
The second figure is even more pointed: the person who “thinks but does not learn” is “in great danger.” Confucius frames untethered cleverness as risky, not heroic. The danger is arrogance disguised as originality, the temptation to build theories without the friction of tradition, evidence, or lived models of virtue. In the Analects’ world, learning isn’t just information intake; it’s apprenticeship in conduct, a slow calibration of the self through texts, teachers, and ritual practice. Thinking without that training doesn’t liberate you; it unmoors you.
The line’s subtext is political as much as personal. Confucius lived amid social breakdown and competing ideologies, when ambitious men could talk their way into power. He insists on a double discipline: reflection to keep tradition from becoming rote, and learning to keep reflection from becoming vanity. Wisdom, here, is not a spark. It’s a system of checks and balances inside the mind.
Quote Details
| Topic | Wisdom |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: The Analects of Confucius (Confucius, 1861)
Evidence: The Master said, 'Learning without thought is labour lost; thought without learning is perilous.' (Book II (Wei Chang), Chapter XV (2.15)). This is the primary-source location within Confucius's own work (the Lunyu/Analects), specifically Analects 2.15. The wording you supplied (“He who learns but does not think, is lost! He who thinks but does not learn is in great danger”) is a later English rendering/paraphrase of the same Analects passage, not the earliest English publication. The earliest widely-cited English translation is James Legge’s 1861 translation in The Chinese Classics, Vol. 1, where it appears as above in Book II, Chapter XV (2.15). Other candidates (1) China (The Editorial Committee of Chinese Ci..., 2007) compilation95.3% ... Confucius's view , “ He who learns but does not think is lost . He who thinks but does not learn is in great dang... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Confucius. (2026, February 9). He who learns but does not think, is lost! He who thinks but does not learn is in great danger. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/he-who-learns-but-does-not-think-is-lost-he-who-24763/
Chicago Style
Confucius. "He who learns but does not think, is lost! He who thinks but does not learn is in great danger." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/he-who-learns-but-does-not-think-is-lost-he-who-24763/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"He who learns but does not think, is lost! He who thinks but does not learn is in great danger." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/he-who-learns-but-does-not-think-is-lost-he-who-24763/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.











