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Life & Mortality Quote by Ludwig Wittgenstein

"Resting on your laurels is as dangerous as resting when you are walking in the snow. You doze off and die in your sleep"

About this Quote

Wittgenstein turns a cozy idiom into a survival warning. "Laurels" are the old emblem of earned glory, but he treats them like fresh snow: soft, flattering, and lethal if you mistake comfort for safety. The line works because it refuses the usual moral about ambition. It is not "keep striving" in a self-help sense; it's "stay awake", cognitively and ethically, because the mind has a talent for falling asleep inside its own victories.

The snow image is doing quiet philosophical labor. Walking in snow suggests effort without clear landmarks, a landscape that looks uniform until it kills you. That is Wittgenstein's terrain: language and thought feel familiar, even homely, right up to the moment they numb you. Dozing off is the slide into automaticity: repeating inherited phrases, leaning on established methods, letting earlier insights harden into doctrine. For a philosopher who spent his career attacking the spell of language and his own temptation to system-build, "rest" is not leisure; it's capitulation to illusion.

Context sharpens the threat. Wittgenstein distrusted academic prestige and treated philosophy less as a body of results than as continuous self-correction. He revised, withdrew, restarted, and suspected that yesterday's clarity becomes today's obstacle. The subtext is almost autobiographical: any triumph, even a brilliant one, can become a sedative. In his world, the enemy isn't error so much as complacent certainty - the moment you think you're done thinking, the cold moves in.

Quote Details

TopicMotivational
Source
Verified source: Culture and Value (Ludwig Wittgenstein, 1980)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Resting on your laurels is as dangerous as resting when you are walking in the snow. You doze off and die in your sleep. (p. 35e (entry dated 1939–1940)). This wording is attributed (with page reference) to Wittgenstein’s posthumously edited notebooks in *Culture and Value* (German: *Vermischte Bemerkungen*), edited by G. H. von Wright; English translation by Peter Winch. Multiple independent quote references (e.g., AZQuotes and Wikiquote) point to p. 35e. The underlying German original appears in the 1939–1940 section of *Vermischte Bemerkungen*: “Auf seinen Lorbeeren auszuruhen ist so gefährlich, wie auf einer Schneewanderung ausruhen. Du nickst ein, und stirbst im Schlaf.” (dated 1939–1940). For a primary-text witness of the German, see the Ludwig Wittgenstein Project’s web edition of *Vermischte Bemerkungen* (1939–1940 entry).
Other candidates (1)
Culture and Value (Ludwig Wittgenstein, 1984) compilation97.1%
Ludwig Wittgenstein Georg Henrik Wright, Heikki Nyman. 1939-1940 What does Mendelssohn's music lack ? A ... Resting o...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Wittgenstein, Ludwig. (2026, February 10). Resting on your laurels is as dangerous as resting when you are walking in the snow. You doze off and die in your sleep. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/resting-on-your-laurels-is-as-dangerous-as-41623/

Chicago Style
Wittgenstein, Ludwig. "Resting on your laurels is as dangerous as resting when you are walking in the snow. You doze off and die in your sleep." FixQuotes. February 10, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/resting-on-your-laurels-is-as-dangerous-as-41623/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Resting on your laurels is as dangerous as resting when you are walking in the snow. You doze off and die in your sleep." FixQuotes, 10 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/resting-on-your-laurels-is-as-dangerous-as-41623/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.

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Ludwig Wittgenstein

Ludwig Wittgenstein (April 26, 1889 - April 29, 1951) was a Philosopher from Austria.

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