"The beginning of an acquaintance whether with persons or things is to get a definite outline of our ignorance"
About this Quote
Meeting something new, Eliot suggests, is less like opening a door than switching on a harsher light: the first honest outcome is not knowledge but the shape of what you do not know. The line has the cool discipline of a realist novelist who distrusted epiphanies. In Eliot's world, moral feeling without clear perception becomes self-deception; sympathy must be earned by attention. So she makes “ignorance” not a shameful void but a mapped territory, something with edges you can trace.
The phrasing matters. “Definite outline” turns ignorance into an object you can draw around, implying humility as a practical tool rather than a pious pose. You cannot learn a person or a “thing” (an idea, a system, a craft) until you stop mistaking your projections for understanding. That’s the subtext: first encounters tempt us to fill in blanks with confidence, to treat familiarity as intimacy. Eliot punctures that reflex by defining true acquaintance as the moment your assumptions become visible.
Contextually, it fits her Victorian preoccupation with the limits of judgment in a rapidly expanding world: new sciences, new social classes, new political arguments, new kinds of strangers. Eliot’s novels are crowded with characters ruined not by malice but by premature certainty. This sentence is her quiet antidote: begin by locating the ignorance you’re carrying into the room. It’s an ethics of attention disguised as an epistemology, insisting that knowing starts when you can name what you’re missing.
The phrasing matters. “Definite outline” turns ignorance into an object you can draw around, implying humility as a practical tool rather than a pious pose. You cannot learn a person or a “thing” (an idea, a system, a craft) until you stop mistaking your projections for understanding. That’s the subtext: first encounters tempt us to fill in blanks with confidence, to treat familiarity as intimacy. Eliot punctures that reflex by defining true acquaintance as the moment your assumptions become visible.
Contextually, it fits her Victorian preoccupation with the limits of judgment in a rapidly expanding world: new sciences, new social classes, new political arguments, new kinds of strangers. Eliot’s novels are crowded with characters ruined not by malice but by premature certainty. This sentence is her quiet antidote: begin by locating the ignorance you’re carrying into the room. It’s an ethics of attention disguised as an epistemology, insisting that knowing starts when you can name what you’re missing.
Quote Details
| Topic | Knowledge |
|---|
More Quotes by George
Add to List









