"Zeal will do more than knowledge"
About this Quote
Hazlitt is throwing a dart at the polite faith that intelligence naturally rules the world. "Zeal will do more than knowledge" isn’t anti-intellectual so much as anti-complacent: a warning that ideas don’t move on their own. Knowledge sits neatly on the shelf; zeal kicks the door in. The line has the clipped, combative confidence of a critic who watched brilliant arguments lose to louder conviction in an age of revolutions, pamphlets, and public agitation.
The intent is pragmatic and slightly acid. Hazlitt knew the Enlightenment promise - educate people and progress follows - and he also knew how often history runs on stubborn will, not correct information. Zeal, in his framing, is the engine: appetite, commitment, obsession, the capacity to risk embarrassment and sacrifice. Knowledge can refine that energy, but without the heat of wanting something, it remains inert, even decorative.
The subtext carries a double edge. On one side, it flatters the driven outsider: you don’t need perfect credentials to matter; intensity can outrun expertise. On the other, it quietly admits a darker political truth: zeal doesn’t care whether it’s right. It can mobilize crowds, topple regimes, sell snake oil, or turn certainty into cruelty. Hazlitt’s era supplied plenty of evidence in both directions, from democratic fervor to reactionary backlash.
That’s why the sentence still lands now, in a culture where information is abundant and persuasion is scarce. Hazlitt is measuring power, not virtue: the world rewards those who want it hardest.
The intent is pragmatic and slightly acid. Hazlitt knew the Enlightenment promise - educate people and progress follows - and he also knew how often history runs on stubborn will, not correct information. Zeal, in his framing, is the engine: appetite, commitment, obsession, the capacity to risk embarrassment and sacrifice. Knowledge can refine that energy, but without the heat of wanting something, it remains inert, even decorative.
The subtext carries a double edge. On one side, it flatters the driven outsider: you don’t need perfect credentials to matter; intensity can outrun expertise. On the other, it quietly admits a darker political truth: zeal doesn’t care whether it’s right. It can mobilize crowds, topple regimes, sell snake oil, or turn certainty into cruelty. Hazlitt’s era supplied plenty of evidence in both directions, from democratic fervor to reactionary backlash.
That’s why the sentence still lands now, in a culture where information is abundant and persuasion is scarce. Hazlitt is measuring power, not virtue: the world rewards those who want it hardest.
Quote Details
| Topic | Motivational |
|---|
More Quotes by William
Add to List








