"None are more taken in by flattery than the proud, who wish to be the first and are not"
About this Quote
Pride, for Spinoza, is less a virtue than a leak in the soul: the swaggering desire to be "first" paired with the private knowledge that you’re not. That split is where flattery gets its grip. The line works because it flips the usual target. We tend to picture the vain as self-sufficient, too enamored of themselves to be fooled. Spinoza argues the opposite: the truly proud are uniquely gullible, precisely because their self-image is aspirational rather than secure. Compliments don’t merely please them; they supply evidence for a claim they can’t quite prove.
The subtext is almost clinical. Flattery is not magic, it’s leverage. It offers the proud an external mirror that reflects the hierarchy they crave. And because they "wish to be the first and are not", they’re hungry for shortcuts: recognition without achievement, status without the slow work of becoming. Flatterers sense that hunger and feed it, turning admiration into a form of control.
Context matters: Spinoza is writing in a 17th-century world of religious authority, court politics, and intellectual factionalism, where social survival often depended on patronage and public reputation. His Ethics treats emotions as natural forces with predictable causes, not as moral mysteries. In that frame, flattery is an engineered passion, and pride is a vulnerability disguised as dominance. The barb lands because it’s not merely a warning about liars; it’s an exposure of the proud person’s dependence on other people’s voices.
The subtext is almost clinical. Flattery is not magic, it’s leverage. It offers the proud an external mirror that reflects the hierarchy they crave. And because they "wish to be the first and are not", they’re hungry for shortcuts: recognition without achievement, status without the slow work of becoming. Flatterers sense that hunger and feed it, turning admiration into a form of control.
Context matters: Spinoza is writing in a 17th-century world of religious authority, court politics, and intellectual factionalism, where social survival often depended on patronage and public reputation. His Ethics treats emotions as natural forces with predictable causes, not as moral mysteries. In that frame, flattery is an engineered passion, and pride is a vulnerability disguised as dominance. The barb lands because it’s not merely a warning about liars; it’s an exposure of the proud person’s dependence on other people’s voices.
Quote Details
| Topic | Humility |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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