MOTIVATING TIPS

Aaron Sorkin

Born 1961 · American screenwriter and playwright

1 verified quote1 topicAll with editorial commentary

[ Life ]

The son of a labor attorney and a former actress, Sorkin grew up in Manhattan's Upper West Side during the 1960s and studied English at Syracuse University. By 1989, his play *A Few Good Men* was staging Off-Broadway; the courtroom drama became a Hollywood fixture after the 1992 film adaptation, where Jack Nicholson's monologue about "the truth" entered permanent cultural vocabulary. He moved to television in 1999, creating *The West Wing* for NBC—a seven-season meditation on presidential idealism that aired until 2006 and won 27 Emmy Awards.

[ Words & Works ]

Sorkin's gift is dialogue that sounds like how brilliant people actually think: rapid-fire, sometimes contradictory, alive with argument. *The Newsroom* (2012-2014) and *The Trial of the Chicago 7* (2020) continued his preoccupation with institutions—democracy, journalism, the law—under pressure. His speeches land because they're written for human voices, not broadcast. Critics often call him too earnest, too enamored with institutions worth saving. He remains precisely that: an author who still believes words matter in rooms where power lives.

Frequently asked

What are the best Aaron Sorkin quotes?

Aaron Sorkin is best known for quotes on On Confidence. Among the most cited: "You can't handle the truth!" from A Few Good Men.

How many Aaron Sorkin quotes does MotivatingTips have?

MotivatingTips has 1 verified Aaron Sorkin quote, each with editorial commentary and source verification. Quotes are organized across On Confidence.

What book are Aaron Sorkin's quotes from?

Quotes on MotivatingTips are sourced from A Few Good Men.

Are these Aaron Sorkin quotes verified?

Every Aaron Sorkin quote on MotivatingTips includes verified attribution with source, book, chapter, or speech reference where available.

Best Aaron Sorkin Quotes

Hand-picked, verified, and explained.

You can't handle the truth!

VerifiedA Few Good Men, 1992, spoken by Colonel Nathan R. Jessup (Jack Nicholson)
Why This Matters

The line's real power lies not in its surface meaning about weakness, but in what it reveals about those who speak it—that we often mistake our own need to control a narrative for the other person's inability to bear it. Jack Nicholson's character didn't withhold truth because his junior officer was fragile; he withheld it because admitting certain facts would dismantle the authority structure that kept him comfortable. You see this same dynamic in workplaces constantly, when managers insist subordinates "aren't ready" to know about layoffs or budget decisions, when the real barrier is the manager's fear of losing control of the conversation. Sorkin wrote a character study disguised as a confrontation—a portrait of how power often hides behind invented concern for others' sensibilities.

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APA Style

Aaron Sorkin Quotes. (n.d.). MotivatingTips. Retrieved May 12, 2026, from https://www.motivatingtips.com/authors/aaron-sorkin

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Aaron Sorkin Quotes. MotivatingTips, DSS Media, 2026. https://www.motivatingtips.com/authors/aaron-sorkin, accessed May 12, 2026.

MLA Style

"Aaron Sorkin Quotes." MotivatingTips. DSS Media, 2026. 12 May 2026. https://www.motivatingtips.com/authors/aaron-sorkin

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