"Nothing great in the world has ever been accomplished without passion"
About this Quote
The subtext is thornier than an inspirational poster. Hegel’s “great” doesn’t mean morally pure; it means historically consequential. The “world-historical” figures in his work - Napoleon is the notorious example - don’t embody virtue so much as intensity. They’re driven by ambition, vanity, obsession, even appetite. That’s the provocation: history advances through imperfect agents, and their private desires can accidentally serve a larger rational pattern. Passion is both suspect and indispensable.
Context matters: Hegel is writing in the wake of the French Revolution and the Napoleonic era, when Europe watched ideals turn into guillotines, empires, and administrative modernity. Against that backdrop, this sentence is less self-help than diagnosis. It explains why eras change: not because arguments win, but because commitments harden into action. The line still stings because it refuses a comforting middle ground. If you want “greatness,” Hegel implies, you’re also inviting volatility - the same heat that forges can also burn.
Quote Details
| Topic | Motivational |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: Vorlesungen über die Philosophie der Geschichte (Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, 1837)
Evidence: so müssen wir überhaupt sagen, daß nichts Großes in der Welt ohne Leidenschaft vollbracht worden ist. (Einleitung (Introduction) / section discussing 'Interesse' and 'Leidenschaft' (exact page varies by edition)). This line appears in Hegel’s Introduction to his lectures on the philosophy of history, in the passage where he explains that nothing is accomplished without the actors’ 'interest', and that if one calls such interest 'passion' (Leidenschaft), then 'nothing great in the world' is accomplished without it. The commonly-circulated English quote ('Nothing great in the world has ever been accomplished without passion') is a shortened/modernized rendering of standard English translations of this passage (often titled 'Lectures on the Philosophy of World History' / 'Philosophy of History'). About 'FIRST published or spoken': Hegel delivered these as lectures during his lifetime; they were published posthumously from students’ notes/editors’ work. The earliest *publication* is generally treated as the first edition of these lectures (German) in the 1830s; many English editions later reproduce the same sentence. I attempted to retrieve an edition-stable page number directly from an online facsimile, but the web fetch timed out/errored for the full page view in this environment, so I can’t responsibly assert a single definitive page number for all editions. If you tell me which edition/translation you’re using (publisher/year), I can pinpoint the exact page in that specific edition. Other candidates (1) The Problem with Perfect (Bo Parrish, 2015) compilation95.0% ... Nothing great in the world has ever been accomplished without passion. —Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel. Congratula... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich. (2026, February 9). Nothing great in the world has ever been accomplished without passion. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/nothing-great-in-the-world-has-ever-been-474/
Chicago Style
Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich. "Nothing great in the world has ever been accomplished without passion." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/nothing-great-in-the-world-has-ever-been-474/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Nothing great in the world has ever been accomplished without passion." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/nothing-great-in-the-world-has-ever-been-474/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.










