"I didn't think; I experimented"
About this Quote
A small provocation disguised as a modest confession, "I didn't think; I experimented" is Burgess dodging the saintly pose of the novelist as philosopher. It’s a swipe at the expectation that serious fiction must arrive with a moral brief, a complete theory of human nature, or a neatly laminated "message". Burgess, who wrote with the manic versatility of someone racing his own mind, flips the prestige hierarchy: thinking is the armchair act; experimenting is the work.
The intent is partly defensive, partly boastful. Burgess had critics who treated him as either a cold stylist or a moral engineer because A Clockwork Orange practically begs to be argued about: free will, state violence, the ethics of conditioning. By insisting on experimentation, he reframes those debates as byproducts, not blueprints. He’s saying: I built a machine and watched what happened. If it horrifies you, that’s the point.
The subtext is that "thinking" can be a kind of self-deception - a way to claim purity and control. "Experimented" implies mess, risk, and results you don’t get to curate. It also nods to Burgess’s formal play: invented slang, musical structures, theological puzzles, genre-hopping. His novels often feel like stress tests for language and morality, less sermon than lab.
Contextually, the line fits a postwar British writer wary of grand systems. After ideologies proved lethal at scale, the artist’s more honest posture isn’t certainty; it’s trial, error, and the courage to see what human beings do when the constraints change.
The intent is partly defensive, partly boastful. Burgess had critics who treated him as either a cold stylist or a moral engineer because A Clockwork Orange practically begs to be argued about: free will, state violence, the ethics of conditioning. By insisting on experimentation, he reframes those debates as byproducts, not blueprints. He’s saying: I built a machine and watched what happened. If it horrifies you, that’s the point.
The subtext is that "thinking" can be a kind of self-deception - a way to claim purity and control. "Experimented" implies mess, risk, and results you don’t get to curate. It also nods to Burgess’s formal play: invented slang, musical structures, theological puzzles, genre-hopping. His novels often feel like stress tests for language and morality, less sermon than lab.
Contextually, the line fits a postwar British writer wary of grand systems. After ideologies proved lethal at scale, the artist’s more honest posture isn’t certainty; it’s trial, error, and the courage to see what human beings do when the constraints change.
Quote Details
| Topic | Learning |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Burgess, Anthony. (2026, January 18). I didn't think; I experimented. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-didnt-think-i-experimented-3190/
Chicago Style
Burgess, Anthony. "I didn't think; I experimented." FixQuotes. January 18, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-didnt-think-i-experimented-3190/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"I didn't think; I experimented." FixQuotes, 18 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-didnt-think-i-experimented-3190/. Accessed 13 Feb. 2026.
More Quotes by Anthony
Add to List




