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Daily Inspiration Quote by Clare Boothe Luce

"Thoughts have no sex"

About this Quote

A four-word slap at the polite sexism of Luce's era, "Thoughts have no sex" sounds almost airy until you hear the steel in it. Clare Boothe Luce wasn’t a theorist writing from the seminar room; she was a dramatist and public operator who knew that ideas are judged less by their rigor than by the body presumed to have produced them. The line works because it refuses the terms of the debate. It doesn’t plead for women to be admitted to the intellectual club; it declares the club’s bouncer a fraud.

The intent is surgical: detach intellect from biology, and you collapse the most common excuse for exclusion. If a thought is coherent, strategic, funny, true, or useful, then its value can’t logically depend on whether a man or a woman said it. That’s the surface. The subtext is more cutting: the insistence on "women’s ideas" as a special category is often a way of shrinking them. "Thoughts have no sex" exposes the trick of treating male thinking as the default and female thinking as a niche product.

Context matters: Luce came up in a culture where women were routinely cast as muses, ornaments, or moral weather vanes, not as authors of arguments. As a playwright, she also understood performance. The sentence is built for repetition, for rooms where you need a line that can’t be easily heckled. It’s both banner and dagger: an invitation to judge ideas on their merits, and an accusation against anyone who won’t.

Quote Details

TopicEquality
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Thoughts have no sex
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About the Author

Clare Boothe Luce

Clare Boothe Luce (April 10, 1903 - October 9, 1987) was a Dramatist from USA.

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