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Success Quote by Steve Jobs

"I'm an optimist in the sense that I believe humans are noble and honorable, and some of them are really smart. I have a very optimistic view of individuals"

About this Quote

Jobs’s optimism isn’t the soft-focus kind; it’s a selective, almost engineered faith in the individual. He’s not praising “humanity” as a warm collective. He’s handpicking a model user: the noble, honorable, really smart person who, given the right tools, will do something astonishing. That framing matters because it mirrors Apple’s core mythology: technology as a bicycle for the mind, designed for people who want to make, not merely consume.

The line is doing two things at once. On the surface, it reads like humanistic confidence. Underneath, it’s a justification for Jobs’s famously demanding standards. If people are capable of greatness, then mediocrity isn’t an acceptable outcome; it’s a design failure, a management failure, a moral failure. His “optimism” becomes permission to push teams hard and simplify relentlessly, because the end user is presumed worthy of that effort.

The careful pivot to “individuals” is the tell. Jobs distrusts committees, market research, and consensus thinking; he bets on singular vision and singular taste. That’s why the quote lands as both generous and elitist. It elevates people while quietly narrowing which people count: the ones who can meet the product halfway, who will appreciate the elegance, who will “get it.”

Contextually, it fits a post-1970s Silicon Valley belief system: human potential unlocked by personal computing, with idealism packaged inside a premium object. It’s optimism with a bill of materials.

Quote Details

TopicOptimism
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Steve Jobs on Optimism, Individuals, and Leadership
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Steve Jobs

Steve Jobs (February 24, 1955 - October 5, 2011) was a Businessman from USA.

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