"Science is for those who learn, poetry is for those who know"
About this Quote
Roux’s line flatters the faithful while tossing a cool, clerical side-eye at modern certainty. “Science is for those who learn” frames science as apprenticeship: incremental, procedural, always one experiment away from revision. It’s respectful, but subtly diminishing too, casting scientific inquiry as a posture of perpetual catching up. Then comes the pivot: “poetry is for those who know.” Not “those who feel,” not “those who enjoy,” but those who know - a word loaded with moral confidence and spiritual authority. Roux is quietly reclaiming the high ground for forms of understanding that can’t be verified in a lab: intuition, revelation, tradition, the inner life.
The subtext is a jurisdictional argument. In an era when scientific prestige was expanding and religious institutions were negotiating their relevance, a clergyman could concede science’s usefulness without surrendering ultimate meaning. Poetry becomes the bridge: it’s not theology on the nose, but it traffics in the same territory religion does - mystery, symbol, the unsayable. By calling poetry “knowledge,” Roux upgrades it from decoration to epistemology: a way of grasping truth that isn’t reducible to data.
The phrase also works because it needles the reader’s pride. Nobody wants to be merely “learning” forever; “knowing” sounds like arrival. Roux tempts us with that status - and implies that the deepest truths aren’t earned by method alone, but recognized, almost remembered, through language that can hold contradiction without solving it.
The subtext is a jurisdictional argument. In an era when scientific prestige was expanding and religious institutions were negotiating their relevance, a clergyman could concede science’s usefulness without surrendering ultimate meaning. Poetry becomes the bridge: it’s not theology on the nose, but it traffics in the same territory religion does - mystery, symbol, the unsayable. By calling poetry “knowledge,” Roux upgrades it from decoration to epistemology: a way of grasping truth that isn’t reducible to data.
The phrase also works because it needles the reader’s pride. Nobody wants to be merely “learning” forever; “knowing” sounds like arrival. Roux tempts us with that status - and implies that the deepest truths aren’t earned by method alone, but recognized, almost remembered, through language that can hold contradiction without solving it.
Quote Details
| Topic | Poetry |
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