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Wit & Attitude Quote by James A. Baldwin

"When a man asks himself what is meant by action, he proves that he isn't a man of action. Action is a lack of balance. In order to act, you must be somewhat insane. A reasonably sensible man is satisfied with thinking"

About this Quote

Baldwin rigs this line like a trap for the self-serious: the moment you start theorizing about action, you’ve already stepped out of the arena and into the spectator seats. It’s a deliberately unfair standard, and that’s the point. He’s skewering a particular modern vanity - the belief that moral contemplation is itself a kind of work, that naming problems counts as confronting them. The first sentence lands as a taunt, almost schoolyard in its simplicity, but it’s also a diagnostic: hesitation can disguise itself as sophistication.

“Action is a lack of balance” is Baldwin at his most psychologically exact. Action isn’t the calm, centered thing motivational posters promise; it’s a lurch. To move is to risk being wrong, to overcommit, to rupture your own self-image as reasonable. That’s why he reaches for “insane,” not as clinical description but as a provocation: the courage to act looks irrational to the cautious mind because it requires a temporary suspension of equilibrium - social, emotional, even ethical. You choose a direction before you can guarantee the ending.

The sting is reserved for the “reasonably sensible man,” that polite figure Baldwin distrusts: the person who can always find a rationale for waiting, who turns intelligence into an alibi. Coming out of Baldwin’s mid-century America - where racial injustice was maintained not only by cruelty but by genteel delay - the line reads less like anti-intellectualism than an indictment of thinking that never risks consequence. He’s not against thought; he’s against thought that’s satisfied with itself.

Quote Details

TopicWisdom
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Baldwin, James A. (2026, February 19). When a man asks himself what is meant by action, he proves that he isn't a man of action. Action is a lack of balance. In order to act, you must be somewhat insane. A reasonably sensible man is satisfied with thinking. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/when-a-man-asks-himself-what-is-meant-by-action-41378/

Chicago Style
Baldwin, James A. "When a man asks himself what is meant by action, he proves that he isn't a man of action. Action is a lack of balance. In order to act, you must be somewhat insane. A reasonably sensible man is satisfied with thinking." FixQuotes. February 19, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/when-a-man-asks-himself-what-is-meant-by-action-41378/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"When a man asks himself what is meant by action, he proves that he isn't a man of action. Action is a lack of balance. In order to act, you must be somewhat insane. A reasonably sensible man is satisfied with thinking." FixQuotes, 19 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/when-a-man-asks-himself-what-is-meant-by-action-41378/. Accessed 24 Mar. 2026.

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About the Author

James A. Baldwin

James A. Baldwin (August 2, 1924 - December 1, 1987) was a Author from USA.

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