"Many ideas grow better when transplanted into another mind than in the one where they sprung up"
About this Quote
Context matters. Holmes lived in a 19th-century American culture drunk on originality and authorship, while also immersed in institutions - medical training, lectures, salons, magazines - that ran on circulation. He belonged to the Boston Brahmin world that prized conversation as a technology: ideas were meant to be tested in company, sharpened in debate, refined for publication. In that ecosystem, “another mind” is not theft; it’s the proving ground where raw intuition becomes usable thought.
The intent, then, is both ethical and practical. Ethically, it nudges readers toward intellectual humility: if your idea improves in someone else’s head, your ownership was never the point. Practically, it’s advice about how thinking actually works. We don’t just exchange conclusions; we exchange frameworks, metaphors, and doubts. Holmes implies that the most valuable part of an idea may be what it becomes after you stop trying to control it.
Quote Details
| Topic | Learning |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: The Poet at the Breakfast-Table (Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr., 1872)
Evidence: Many ideas grow better when transplanted into another mind than in the one where they sprang up. (Chapter VI (Project Gutenberg HTML line ~1304; print page varies by edition)). Primary-source match in Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr.'s own text. In the Project Gutenberg transcription of The Poet at the Breakfast-Table, the sentence appears at the start of section/chapter “VI,” in a paragraph beginning “I find I have so many things in common with the old Master of Arts...”. The work was also first published serially in The Atlantic Monthly in 1872 (per Open Library’s edition notes), but I did not locate the specific Atlantic issue/date for Chapter VI within the time available; the earliest *verified primary text* I can point to directly is the 1872 book form. Other candidates (1) Transdisciplinary Systems Engineering (Azad M. Madni, 2017) compilation95.0% ... Many ideas grow better when transplanted into another mind than in the one where they sprung up.” – Oliver Wendel... |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Sr., Oliver Wendell Holmes. (2026, February 9). Many ideas grow better when transplanted into another mind than in the one where they sprung up. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/many-ideas-grow-better-when-transplanted-into-9352/
Chicago Style
Sr., Oliver Wendell Holmes. "Many ideas grow better when transplanted into another mind than in the one where they sprung up." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/many-ideas-grow-better-when-transplanted-into-9352/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Many ideas grow better when transplanted into another mind than in the one where they sprung up." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/many-ideas-grow-better-when-transplanted-into-9352/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.






