Listen as Lucien Price distinguishes between great thoughts and great actions:
There seems to be a notion prevalent among us that a thinker is a queer bird who rarely if ever hatches any eggs. We are all for the doer. Give us the man of action.
Does it ever occur to us that a thought of some sort, even a murderous one, must precede every act? Does it ever occur to us that the doer is little more than the errand-boy of the thinker, and that there is no power on earth to match the power of an idea? (Quoted from Prophets Unawares, by Lucien Price, New York: The New Century Co., 1925; p. 21.)
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