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Life & Wisdom Quote by Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe

"Who is the most sensible person? The one who finds what is to their own advantage in all that happens to them"

About this Quote

Sensible, for Goethe, isn’t the meek virtue of good judgment; it’s a kind of psychological judo. The “most sensible person” isn’t the one with the best moral compass or the clearest view of reality, but the one who can metabolize reality into advantage. That choice of “finds” matters: advantage isn’t always there like loose change on the sidewalk. It’s extracted, interpreted, willed into existence. Sensibility becomes an active art, less about being right than about being resilient.

The subtext is almost provocatively modern. Goethe is sketching an inner economy in which events don’t confer meaning; the self does. Misfortune, embarrassment, detours, even loss can be processed into something usable: insight, leverage, discipline, a sharpened sense of desire. It’s optimism stripped of sentimentality. Not “everything happens for a reason,” but “I can make a reason out of anything.” That’s why the line lands with such quiet force: it flatters agency without pretending life is fair.

Context helps. Goethe lived through Europe’s convulsions - revolution, Napoleonic reordering, the churn of modernity arriving in real time. His writing, from Werther’s emotional extremes to Faust’s restless striving, keeps returning to self-fashioning under pressure: how a person stays intact when history won’t. The intent here is practical and a bit stern: sensibility is survival plus strategy. The risk, of course, is moral solipsism - “advantage” can shade into self-justification. Goethe leaves that tension intact, which is exactly what makes it feel true.

Quote Details

TopicWisdom
SourceGoethe, Johann Wolfgang von , aphorism from 'Maxims and Reflections' (Maximen und Reflexionen). German original: "Wer ist der vernünftigste Mensch? Derjenige, der aus allem, was ihm begegnet, das für ihn Nützliche findet."
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang Von. (2026, January 14). Who is the most sensible person? The one who finds what is to their own advantage in all that happens to them. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/who-is-the-most-sensible-person-the-one-who-finds-33812/

Chicago Style
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang Von. "Who is the most sensible person? The one who finds what is to their own advantage in all that happens to them." FixQuotes. January 14, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/who-is-the-most-sensible-person-the-one-who-finds-33812/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Who is the most sensible person? The one who finds what is to their own advantage in all that happens to them." FixQuotes, 14 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/who-is-the-most-sensible-person-the-one-who-finds-33812/. Accessed 7 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe

Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe (August 28, 1749 - March 22, 1832) was a Writer from Germany.

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