"We are all born ignorant, but one must work hard to remain stupid"
About this Quote
Franklin’s line lands like a polite insult delivered with a smile: ignorance is the default, stupidity is a choice you have to keep choosing. The pivot is the word “work.” He flips the usual moral hierarchy. Being uninformed isn’t a sin; it’s the starting condition of human life. What’s blameworthy is the active maintenance of that condition: dodging evidence, refusing to read, mistaking pride for principle. In other words, stupidity isn’t a lack of intelligence so much as a practiced stubbornness.
The subtext is civic, not merely personal. Franklin was a printer, a scientist, a diplomat, and a political operator in a young republic that depended on an informed public but was already vulnerable to rumor, demagoguery, and sectarian certainty. The quip doubles as a theory of democracy: self-government requires self-education, and the enemy isn’t complexity but complacency. You can hear the Enlightenment in the cadence: progress is possible, but only if curiosity outworks comfort.
It also functions as a social discipline. Franklin’s America loved its self-made myths; this sentence weaponizes them. If you’re “stupid,” it’s not fate, class, or bad luck - it’s labor you’ve invested in not learning. That’s harsh, and that’s why it works. It flatters nobody, least of all the speaker, while nudging the listener toward a distinctly Franklinian virtue: the daily, unglamorous grind of becoming less wrong.
The subtext is civic, not merely personal. Franklin was a printer, a scientist, a diplomat, and a political operator in a young republic that depended on an informed public but was already vulnerable to rumor, demagoguery, and sectarian certainty. The quip doubles as a theory of democracy: self-government requires self-education, and the enemy isn’t complexity but complacency. You can hear the Enlightenment in the cadence: progress is possible, but only if curiosity outworks comfort.
It also functions as a social discipline. Franklin’s America loved its self-made myths; this sentence weaponizes them. If you’re “stupid,” it’s not fate, class, or bad luck - it’s labor you’ve invested in not learning. That’s harsh, and that’s why it works. It flatters nobody, least of all the speaker, while nudging the listener toward a distinctly Franklinian virtue: the daily, unglamorous grind of becoming less wrong.
Quote Details
| Topic | Wisdom |
|---|---|
| Source | Later attribution: Quotes: The Famous and Not so Famous (Terence M. Dorn Ph.D., 2021) modern compilationISBN: 9781662447952 · ID: ptZSEAAAQBAJ
Evidence: ... Benjamin Franklin In this world nothing can be said to be certain , except death or taxes . Benjamin Franklin When in doubt , don't . — Benjamin Franklin We are all born ignorant , but one must work hard to remain stupid . Benjamin Franklin ... Other candidates (1) Benjamin Franklin (Benjamin Franklin) compilation36.3% we are beholden to her it is our own fault that we have not kept him whence it a |
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