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Daily Inspiration Quote by Aristotle

"Youth is easily deceived because it is quick to hope"

About this Quote

Aristotle lands the jab with surgeon-level calm: the young aren’t gullible because they’re stupid; they’re gullible because they’re future-oriented. “Quick to hope” is the key phrase. Hope isn’t framed as a virtue here but as a cognitive accelerant, a bias that makes the next promising story feel more real than the current facts. Youth, in Aristotle’s view, lives on credit, emotionally and intellectually: it borrows confidence from what might be, then spends it as certainty.

The line works because it recasts deception as a collaboration. The deceiver isn’t just imposing lies; the deceived are supplying the demand. Hope is the mechanism that lowers the evidentiary bar. If you want something to be true badly enough, you start treating desire as data. That’s not moral condemnation so much as a diagnosis of tempo: youth moves fast, and fast-moving minds accept rough sketches as finished maps.

Context matters: Aristotle is cataloging character types and the psychology of persuasion in works like the Rhetoric, where age isn’t a number but a bundle of tendencies that affect judgment. Young people are depicted as passionate, confident, hungry for ideals; older people as cautious, even suspicious. The subtext is political and pedagogical: if you’re trying to govern, teach, or persuade, you exploit or guard against this hopeful speed. Read today, it’s a warning about startup mythologies, influencer certainty, and ideological recruitment. Hope makes a person brave; it also makes them easy to sell to.

Quote Details

TopicYouth
Source
Verified source: Rhetoric (Aristotle, -350)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
For the young the future is long, the past short; for in the morning of life it is not possible for them to remember anything, but they have everything to hope; which makes them easy to deceive, for they readily hope. (Book 2, Chapter 12 (Bekker 1389a; esp. 1389a around sections [8]–[9])). This is the closest primary-source match to the modern quote “Youth is easily deceived because it is quick to hope.” The popular wording is a tightened paraphrase of this passage in Aristotle’s Rhetoric (Book II, ch. 12), in the section where Aristotle characterizes the dispositions of the young. The Perseus Digital Library provides the text with Bekker numbering; the line appears at Bekker 1389a. Aristotle’s works were composed in the 4th century BCE; many references date the Rhetoric to roughly mid-4th century BCE (often ca. 350 BCE).
Other candidates (1)
... Youth is easily deceived because it is quick to hope " Aristotle Age has two important roles to play . Age define...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Aristotle. (2026, February 27). Youth is easily deceived because it is quick to hope. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/youth-is-easily-deceived-because-it-is-quick-to-29268/

Chicago Style
Aristotle. "Youth is easily deceived because it is quick to hope." FixQuotes. February 27, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/youth-is-easily-deceived-because-it-is-quick-to-29268/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Youth is easily deceived because it is quick to hope." FixQuotes, 27 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/youth-is-easily-deceived-because-it-is-quick-to-29268/. Accessed 20 Mar. 2026.

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Aristotle on Youth, Hope and Deception
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Aristotle

Aristotle (384 BC - 322 BC) was a Philosopher from Greece.

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