"In general, pride is at the bottom of all great mistakes"
About this Quote
Ruskin’s line lands like a moral trapdoor: the word “great” flatters you into thinking of epic blunders made by villains or fools, then “in general” pulls the rug out, insisting the real culprit is ordinary, domesticated pride. He’s not talking about loud swagger. He means the quieter, more reputable kind: the certainty that your taste, your judgment, your righteousness is self-evident. The mistake becomes “great” precisely because pride prevents the small course-corrections that would have kept it small.
The intent is diagnostic, almost clinical. Ruskin was a Victorian critic who spent his career arguing that aesthetics are inseparable from ethics - that the way a society builds, buys, and beautifies reveals its moral health. In that world, pride isn’t a private vice; it’s an engine. It drives bad art (because the maker won’t learn), bad politics (because leaders won’t concede error), and bad economics (because reform feels like humiliation). The line also performs a subtle Victorian maneuver: it condemns without sounding personal. “In general” offers a veneer of impartiality, even as it points a finger at everyone.
Subtext: the real enemy of truth isn’t ignorance, it’s self-protection. Pride makes you defend a decision after evidence turns, doubles down when retreat would save face, and turns criticism into insult. Ruskin’s warning still reads contemporary because modern life monetizes pride - personal brands, hot takes, institutional stubbornness - and then acts surprised when the error scale grows.
The intent is diagnostic, almost clinical. Ruskin was a Victorian critic who spent his career arguing that aesthetics are inseparable from ethics - that the way a society builds, buys, and beautifies reveals its moral health. In that world, pride isn’t a private vice; it’s an engine. It drives bad art (because the maker won’t learn), bad politics (because leaders won’t concede error), and bad economics (because reform feels like humiliation). The line also performs a subtle Victorian maneuver: it condemns without sounding personal. “In general” offers a veneer of impartiality, even as it points a finger at everyone.
Subtext: the real enemy of truth isn’t ignorance, it’s self-protection. Pride makes you defend a decision after evidence turns, doubles down when retreat would save face, and turns criticism into insult. Ruskin’s warning still reads contemporary because modern life monetizes pride - personal brands, hot takes, institutional stubbornness - and then acts surprised when the error scale grows.
Quote Details
| Topic | Humility |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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