About Alfred Nobel: Alfred Bernhard Nobel was a Swedish chemist, engineer, innovator, and armaments manufacturer.
Second to agriculture, humbug is the biggest industry of our age.
Good wishes alone will not ensure peace.
I am a misanthrope and yet utterly benevolent, have more than one screw loose yet am a super-idealist who digests philosophy more efficiently than food.
A heart can no more be forced to love than a stomach can be forced to digest food by persuasion.
Home is where I work, and I work everywhere.
Hope is nature's veil for hiding truth's nakedness.
Justice is to be found only in imagination.
I intend to leave after my death a large fund for the promotion of the peace idea, but I am skeptical as to its results.
If I have a thousand ideas and only one turns out to be good, I am satisfied.
One can state, without exaggeration, that the observation of and the search for similarities and differences are the basis of all human knowledge.
A recluse without books and ink is already in life a dead man.
The first time I saw nitroglycerine was in the beginning of the Crimean War. Professor Zinin in St. Petersburg exhibited some to my father and me, and struck some on an anvil to show that only the part touched by the hammer exploded without spreading...
I have not the slightest pretension to call my verses poetry; I write now and then for no other purpose than to relieve depression or to improve my English.
It is my express wish that in awarding the prizes no consideration be given to the nationality of the candidates, but that the most worthy shall receive the prize, whether he be Scandinavian or not.
For me writing biographies is impossible, unless they are brief and concise, and these are, I feel, the most eloquent.
Contentment is the only real wealth.
Lawyers have to make a living, and can only do so by inducing people to believe that a straight line is crooked.
On the day when two army corps may mutually annihilate each other in a second, probably all civilized nations will recoil with horror and disband their troops.
Kant's style is so heavy that after his pure reason, the reader longs for unreasonableness.
The truthful man is usually a liar.