First Inaugural Address March 4, 1933
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No, the quote "you have nothing to fear but fear itself" was actually said by Franklin D. Roosevelt in his inaugural address in 1933, not John F. Kennedy. Kennedy did not use this quote in any of his speeches.
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Franklin D Roosevelt at his first inaugural speech. "The only thing we have to fear, is fear itself!" Speaking of the depression and the prospect of turning the U.S. economy around.Actually Francis Bacon said it about 400 years ago in his essay on Tribute. He was talking about fortune and change of fortune and how a man with fortitude will not be shaken. Whereas a person who is fearful will suffer much by these changes. He referred to fear as the inner enemy and said "Nothing is to be feared but fear itself. Nothing grievous but to yield to grief" FDR probably learned this in grammar schoolIn all reality you are both correct. While Francis Bacon did say this quote, so did Franklin D. Roosevelt. While the quote was quoted from Francis Bacon by Franklin Roosevelt, Franklin Roosevelt did say it in his inaugural speech so technically, both of you are correct!i have the answer to apex simplifiedConfidence was needed to overcome the Depression.
Franklin Delanor Roosevelt. First Inaugural address.
"[...] only thing we have to fear is fear itself - nameless, unreasoning, unjustified terror which paralyzes needed efforts to convert retreat into advance." ~Franklin D. Roosevelt
yes...
Fear the fear for the fear will make you fear things.
This famous quote from Franklin Delano Roosevelt referred to the fact that uninformed fears and irrational panic can turn a manageable situation into a dangerous crisis.
first used in the FDR inaugaration speech 1933 this is actually NOT TRUE. Sir Frances Bacon coined the phrase in "of Tribute" which he wrote in the early 1600's. The exact quote is, "Nothing is to be feared but fear itself." (Oxford World Classics, Francis Bacon, the Major Works, pg 26)
"The only thing we have to fear....is fear itself." was said in Roosevelt's inagural speech. It was meant to give hope to Americans in the time of the great depression. If we fear fear, we understand fear is something that can potentially stop us from achieving goals.
Franklin D. Roosevelt In nineteen thirty-three, during the Great Depression, Franklin Roosevelt sought to give hope with these words. quote from the VOA Special English