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Daily Inspiration Quote by Francis Bacon

"Truth emerges more readily from error than from confusion"

About this Quote

Error gets a bad rap in Bacon's line because we like to treat it as failure. He treats it as raw material. "Truth emerges more readily from error than from confusion" is a provocation aimed at the foggy comfort of not-knowing: confusion feels innocent, but it's sterile. Error, by contrast, is fertile because it has structure. A wrong claim is still a claim; you can test it, press it, measure where it breaks. Confusion offers no edges to grab, no hypothesis to falsify, no path to correction. Bacon is defending the dignity of being wrong - so long as you're wrong in a way that can be examined.

The subtext is methodological and moral at once. Methodological: knowledge advances by making explicit commitments, then letting experience punish them. Moral: clarity is an ethical stance. Confusion can be a kind of self-protection, a refusal to risk an accountable statement. Error is risk; it exposes you to rebuttal. Bacon quietly ranks the courage of a crisp mistake above the evasiveness of a muddy mind.

Context matters: Bacon is writing at the dawn of modern empiricism, when scholastic authority and rhetorical flourish still dominated European learning. His broader project is to replace reverence for inherited systems with an experimental discipline that can separate signal from superstition. In that world, confusion isn't just personal bewilderment; it's a cultural condition produced by bad categories, airy abstractions, and what Bacon elsewhere calls "idols" - mental habits that distort perception. Error can be corrected. Confusion, left unchallenged, becomes tradition.

Quote Details

TopicTruth
Source
Verified source: Novum Organum (Book II, Aphorism XX) (Francis Bacon, 1620)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Since, however, truth emerges more readily from error than confusion, we consider it useful to leave the understanding at liberty to exert itself and attempt the interpretation of nature in the affirmative, after having constructed and weighed the three tables of preparation, such as we have laid them down, both from the instances there collected, and others occurring elsewhere. (Book II, Aphorism XX ("The First Vintage of the Form of Heat")). This sentence appears in Francis Bacon’s Novum Organum (first published in 1620) in Book II, Aphorism 20 (often numbered with Roman numerals as “XX”), introducing what Bacon calls “the first vintage” (a first-pass hypothesis/interpretation) after assembling tables of instances. Many modern quote listings shorten the sentence to just the clause ending in “error than confusion,” sometimes adding “from” before “confusion.” The wording above is verified in William Wood’s English translation as hosted by Wikisource, and it also matches the Project Gutenberg e-text of Novum Organum at the same passage.
Other candidates (1)
Instructional Development Paradigms (Charles R. Dills, A. J. Romiszowski, 1997) compilation95.0%
... Francis Bacon's2 acute observa- tion that " truth emerges more readily from error than from confusion " is a rati...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Bacon, Francis. (2026, February 15). Truth emerges more readily from error than from confusion. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/truth-emerges-more-readily-from-error-than-from-33203/

Chicago Style
Bacon, Francis. "Truth emerges more readily from error than from confusion." FixQuotes. February 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/truth-emerges-more-readily-from-error-than-from-33203/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Truth emerges more readily from error than from confusion." FixQuotes, 15 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/truth-emerges-more-readily-from-error-than-from-33203/. Accessed 6 Mar. 2026.

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About the Author

Francis Bacon

Francis Bacon (January 21, 1561 - April 9, 1626) was a Philosopher from England.

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