Extremes

(Redirected from Pinnacle)

Extremes are measures falling far outside the norm, and may include drastic or foolhardy expedients undertaken in a crisis.

Quotes

edit
  • Monks, these two extremes ought not to be practiced by one who has gone forth from the household life. What are the two? There is addiction to indulgence of sense-pleasures, which is low, coarse, the way of ordinary people, unworthy, and unprofitable; and there is addiction to self-mortification, which is painful, unworthy, and unprofitable. Avoiding both these extremes, the Tathagata has realized the Middle Path; it gives vision, gives knowledge, and leads to calm, to insight, to enlightenment and to Nibbana. And what is that Middle Path realized by the Tathagata? ... It is the Noble Eightfold Path, and nothing else, namely: right understanding, right thought, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness and right concentration.
  • "Everything exists": That is one extreme. "Everything doesn't exist": That is a second extreme. Avoiding these two extremes, The Tathagata teaches the Dhamma via the middle
  • Should there be danger of such an event — should he be the cause of adding a single more trouble to her existence — Why, I think, I shall be justified in going to extremes!
  • For extreme diseases, extreme methods of cure, as to restriction, are most suitable.
    • Hippocrates, in Aphorisms as translated by Francis Adams (1849) 1:6
    • Variant translations:
    • Extreme remedies are very appropriate for extreme diseases.
  • To "go to extremes" is ever symptomatic of genius and greatness.
  • Darling I don't know why I go to extremes
    Too high or too low there ain't no in-betweens.

Hoyt's New Cyclopedia Of Practical Quotations

edit
Quotes reported in Hoyt's New Cyclopedia Of Practical Quotations (1922), p. 246
  • The fierce extremes of good and ill to brook.
  • Avoid extremes.
    • Attributed to Cleobulus of Lindos
  • Thus each extreme to equal danger tends,
    Plenty, as well as Want, can separate friends.
  • Extremes meet, and there is no better example than the haughtiness of humility.
  • Extremes are faulty and proceed from men: compensation is just, and proceeds from God.
  • And feel by turns the bitter change
    Of fierce extremes, extremes by change more fierce.
  • He that had never seen a river imagined the first he met to be the sea; and the greatest things that have fallen within our knowledge we conclude the extremes that nature makes of the kind.
  • Extremes in nature equal good produce;
    Extremes in man concur to general use.
  • Extrema primo nemo tentavit loco.
  • And where two raging fires meet together,
    They do consume the thing that feeds their fury:
    Though little fire grows great with little wind,
    Yet extreme gusts will blow out fire and all.

See also

edit
edit