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Publilius Syrus
Publilius Syrus
3 weeks 3 days ago
Never promise more than you can...

Never promise more than you can perform.

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Maxim 528
Philosophical Maxims
C. S. Lewis
C. S. Lewis
2 months 3 weeks ago
I am sorry that my convictions...

I am sorry that my convictions do not allow me to repeat my friend's offer, said one of the others. But I have had to abandon the humanitarian and egalitarian fancies. His name was Mr. Neo-Classical.

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Pilgrim's Regress 89
Philosophical Maxims
Democritus
Democritus
2 months 2 weeks ago
Good means not [merely] not to...

Good means not [merely] not to do wrong, but rather not to desire to do wrong.

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Philosophical Maxims
Emil Cioran
Emil Cioran
1 month 3 weeks ago
When you have understood that nothing...

When you have understood that nothing is, that things do not even deserve the status of appearances, you no longer need to be saved, you are saved, and miserable forever.

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Philosophical Maxims
Arthur Schopenhauer
Arthur Schopenhauer
2 months 4 weeks ago
Pride is an established conviction of...

Pride is an established conviction of one's own paramount worth in some particular respect, while vanity is the desire of rousing such a conviction in others, and it is generally accompanied by the secret hope of ultimately coming to the same conviction oneself. Pride works from within; it is the direct appreciation of oneself. Vanity is the desire to arrive at this appreciation indirectly, from without.

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Vol. 1, Ch. 4, § 2
Philosophical Maxims
Mary Wollstonecraft
Mary Wollstonecraft
1 month 3 weeks ago
I write in a hurry, because...

I write in a hurry, because the little one, who has been sleeping a long time, begins to call for me. Poor thing! when I am sad, I lament that all my affections grow on me, till they become too strong for my peace, though they all afford me snatches of exquisite enjoyment.

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Letter to Gilbert Imlay
Philosophical Maxims
Emil Cioran
Emil Cioran
1 month 3 weeks ago
In every man sleeps a prophet,...

In every man sleeps a prophet, and when he wakes there is a little more evil in the world

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Philosophical Maxims
Byung-Chul Han
Byung-Chul Han
1 month 1 week ago
Power tends to reduce openness... Power...

Power tends to reduce openness... Power tries to solidify and stabilize its position by eradicating spaces open to play, or incalculable spaces.

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Philosophical Maxims
Voltaire
Voltaire
2 months 4 weeks ago
Whatever you do…

Whatever you do, crush the infamous thing, and love those who love you.

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Letter to Jean le Rond d'Alembert (28 November 1762);
Philosophical Maxims
Colin Wilson
Colin Wilson
1 month 1 week ago
Considered as a whole, Hesse's achievement...

Considered as a whole, Hesse's achievement can hardly be matched in modern literature; it is the continually rising trajectory of an idea, the fundamentally religious idea of how to 'live more abundantly'. Hesse has little imagination in the sense that Shakespeare or Tolstoy can be said to have imagination, but his ideas have a vitality that more than makes up for it. Before all, he is a novelist who used the novel to explore the problem: What should we do with our lives? The man who is interested to know how he should live instead of merely taking life as it comes, is automatically an Outsider.

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p. 77
Philosophical Maxims
Anne Morrow Lindbergh
Anne Morrow Lindbergh
1 week 2 days ago
Only in growth, reform, and change,...

Only in growth, reform, and change, paradoxically enough, is true security to be found.

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The Wave of the Future
Philosophical Maxims
Francis Bacon
Francis Bacon
3 months 6 days ago
There are and can be only...

There are and can be only two ways of searching into and discovering truth. The one flies from the senses and particulars to the most general axioms, and from these principles, the truth of which it takes for settled and immovable, proceeds to judgment and to the discovery of middle axioms. And this way is now in fashion. The other derives axioms from the senses and particulars, rising by a gradual and unbroken ascent, so that it arrives at the most general axioms last of all. This is the true way, but as yet untried.

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Aphorism 19
Philosophical Maxims
Herbert Spencer
Herbert Spencer
1 month 3 weeks ago
The ultimate result of shielding men...

The ultimate result of shielding men from the effects of folly, is to fill the world with fools.

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Vol. 3, Ch. IX, State-Tamperings with Money and Banks
Philosophical Maxims
Miguel de Unamuno
Miguel de Unamuno
1 month 1 week ago
Physiology does not teach us how...

Physiology does not teach us how to digest, nor logic how to discourse, nor esthetics how to feel beauty or express it, nor ethics how to be good. And indeed it is well if they do not teach us how to be hypocrites; for pedantry, whether it be pedantry of logic, or of esthetics, or of ethics, is at bottom nothing but hypocrisy.

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Philosophical Maxims
bell hooks
bell hooks
1 month 1 week ago
Today's mic-hogging, fast-talking, contentious young….

Today's mic-hogging, fast-talking, contentious young (and old) lefties continue to hawk little books and pamphlets on revolution, always with choice words or documents from Marx, Mao, even Malcolm. But I've never seen a broadside with "A Black Feminist Statement or even the writings of Angela Davis or June Jordan or Barbara Omolade or Flo Kennedy or Audre Lorde or bell hooks or Michelle Wallace, at least not from the groups who call themselves leftist. These women's collective wisdom has provided the richest insights into American radicalism's most fundamental questions: How can we build a multiracial movement? Who are the working class and what do they desire? How do we resolve the Negro Question and the Woman Question? What is freedom?

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Robin Kelley Freedom Dreams
Philosophical Maxims
C. S. Lewis
C. S. Lewis
2 months 3 weeks ago
Even atheists rebel and express, like...

Even atheists rebel and express, like Hardy and Housman, their rage against God although (or because) He does not, on their view, exist...

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Philosophical Maxims
Miguel de Unamuno
Miguel de Unamuno
1 month 1 week ago
In fact, for a voluntarist like...

In fact, for a voluntarist like Schopenhauer, a theory so sanely and cautiously empirical and rational as that of Darwin, left out of account the inward force, the essential motive, of evolution. For what is, in effect, the hidden force, the ultimate agent, which impels organisms to perpetuate themselves and to fight for their persistence and propagation? Selection, adaptation, heredity, these are only external conditions. This inner, essential force has been called will on the supposition that there exists also in other beings that which we feel in ourselves as a feeling of will, the impulse to be everything, to be others as well as ourselves yet without ceasing to be what we are.

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Philosophical Maxims
Miguel de Unamuno
Miguel de Unamuno
1 month 1 week ago
For the mockers are those who...

For the mockers are those who die comically, and God laughs at their comic ending, while the nobler part, the part of tragedy, is theirs who endured the mockery.

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Philosophical Maxims
Horace
Horace
2 months 2 weeks ago
Whoever cultivates the golden mean…

Whoever cultivates the golden mean avoids both the poverty of a hovel and the envy of a palace.

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Book II, ode x, line 5
Philosophical Maxims
José Ortega y Gasset
José Ortega y Gasset
1 month 2 weeks ago
The characteristic of the hour is...

The characteristic of the hour is that the commonplace mind, knowing itself to be commonplace, has the assurance to proclaim the rights of the commonplace and to impose them wherever it will. As they say in the United States: "to be different is to be indecent." The mass crushes beneath it everything that is different, everything that is excellent, individual, qualified and select. Anybody who is not like everybody, who does not think like everybody, runs the risk of being eliminated. And it is clear, of course, that this "everybody" is not "everybody." "Everybody" was normally the complex unity of the mass and the divergent, specialised minorities. Nowadays, "everybody" is the mass alone.

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Chap.I: The Coming Of The Masses
Philosophical Maxims
William James
William James
2 months 3 weeks ago
Pragmatism, on the other hand, asks...

Pragmatism, on the other hand, asks its usual question. "Grant an idea or belief to be true," it says, "what concrete difference will its being true make in anyone's actual life? How will the truth be realized? What experiences will be different from those which would obtain if the belief were false? What, in short, is the truth's cash-value in experiential terms?"

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Lecture VI, Pragmatism's Conception of Truth
Philosophical Maxims
John Rawls
John Rawls
2 months 3 weeks ago
A just system must generate its...

A just system must generate its own support.

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Chapter V, Section 41, p. 261
Philosophical Maxims
Confucius
Confucius
3 months 2 weeks ago
If names be not correct,...

If names be not correct, language is not in accordance with the truth of things. Paraphrased as a chinese proverb stating "The beginning of wisdom is to call things by their proper name."

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Philosophical Maxims
Charles Sanders Peirce
Charles Sanders Peirce
1 month 3 weeks ago
As the mathematics are now understood,...

As the mathematics are now understood, each branch - or, if you please, each problem, - is but the study of the relations of a collection of connected objects, without parts, without any distinctive characters, except their names or designating letters. These objects are commonly called points; but to remove all notion of space relations, it may be better to name them monads. The relations between these points are mere complications of two different kinds of elementary relations, which may be termed immediate connection and immediate non-connection. All the monads except as serve as intermediaries for the connections have distinctive designations.

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p. 268
Philosophical Maxims
Leo Tolstoy
Leo Tolstoy
3 weeks 5 days ago
If a poor person envies a...

If a poor person envies a rich person, he is no better than the rich person.

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p. 89
Philosophical Maxims
Simone Weil
Simone Weil
1 month 1 week ago
Humility consists of knowing that in...

Humility consists of knowing that in this world the whole soul, not only what we term the ego in its totality, but also the supernatural part of the soul, which is God present in it, is subject to time and to the vicissitudes of change. There must be absolutely acceptance of the possibility that everything material in us should be destroyed. But we must simultaneously accept and repudiate the possibility that the supernatural part of the soul should disappear.

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"Concerning the Our Father" in Waiting on God (1972), Routledge & Kegan Paul edition, p. 153
Philosophical Maxims
Voltaire
Voltaire
2 months 4 weeks ago
Quite a heavy weight…

Quite a heavy weight, a name too quickly famous.

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La Henriade, chant troisième, l.41, 1722
Philosophical Maxims
Edmund Burke
Edmund Burke
1 month 3 weeks ago
I tell you again that the...

I tell you again that the recollection of the manner in which I saw the Queen of France in the year 1774 and the contrast between that brilliancy, Splendour, and beauty, with the prostrate Homage of a Nation to her, compared with the abominable Scene of 1789 which I was describing did draw Tears from me and wetted my Paper. These Tears came again into my Eyes almost as often as I lookd at the description. They may again. You do not believe this fact, or that these are my real feelings, but that the whole is affected, or as you express it, 'downright Foppery'. My friend, I tell you it is truth-and that it is true, and will be true, when you and I are no more, and will exist as long as men-with their Natural feelings exist.

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Letter to Philip Francis (20 February 1790), quoted in Alfred Cobban and Robert A. Smith (eds.), The Correspondence of Edmund Burke, Volume VI: July 1789-December 1791 (1967), p. 91
Philosophical Maxims
Confucius
Confucius
3 months 2 weeks ago
It is the way of the...

It is the way of the superior man to prefer the concealment of his virtue, while it daily becomes more illustrious, and it is the way of the mean man to seek notoriety, while he daily goes more and more to ruin. It is characteristic of the superior man, appearing insipid, yet never to produce satiety; while showing a simple negligence, yet to have his accomplishments recognized; while seemingly plain, yet to be discriminating. He knows how what is distant lies in what is near. He knows where the wind proceeds from. He knows how what is minute becomes manifested. Such a one, we may be sure, will enter into virtue.

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Philosophical Maxims
Emil Cioran
Emil Cioran
1 month 3 weeks ago
To live in a saint's heart?...

To live in a saint's heart? I'm afraid of setting the sky ablaze.

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Philosophical Maxims
Isaac Asimov
Isaac Asimov
3 months 3 weeks ago
The history of science is full...

The history of science is full of revolutionary advances that required small insights that anyone might have had, but that, in fact, only one person did.

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Philosophical Maxims
Aldous Huxley
Aldous Huxley
2 months 3 weeks ago
The soul of wit may become...

The soul of wit may become the very body of untruth.

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Foreward (p. vii)
Philosophical Maxims
John Gray
John Gray
3 days ago
Hayek watched the interwar collapse with...

Hayek watched the interwar collapse with horror, as Keynes did, and shared many of Keynes's liberal values. What he failed to understand is that these values cannot be renewed by applying any formula or doctrine, or by trying to construct an ideal liberal regime in which freedom is insulated from the contingencies of politics.

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Philosophical Maxims
comfortdragon
comfortdragon
1 month 3 weeks ago
Man is always...
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Emil Cioran
Emil Cioran
1 month 3 weeks ago
So long as man is protected...

So long as man is protected by madness he functions and flourishes, but when he frees himself from the fruitful tyranny of fixed ideas, he is lost, ruined.

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Philosophical Maxims
Thomas Henry Huxley
Thomas Henry Huxley
1 week 5 days ago
In comparing civilized man with the...

In comparing civilized man with the animal world, one is as the Alpine traveller, who sees the mountains soaring into the sky and can hardly discern where the deep shadowed crags and roseate peaks end, and where the clouds of heaven begin. Surely the awe-struck voyager may be excused if, at first, he refuses to believe the geologist, who tells him that these glorious masses are, after all, the hardened mud of primeval seas, or the cooled slag of subterranean furnaces-of one substance with the dullest clay, but raised by inward forces to that place of proud and seemingly inaccessible glory. But the geologist is right; and due reflection on his teachings, instead of diminishing our reverence and our wonder, adds all the force of intellectual sublimity, to the mere aesthetic intuition of the uninstructed beholder.

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Ch.2, p. 131-132
Philosophical Maxims
Immanuel Kant
Immanuel Kant
2 months 4 weeks ago
A metaphysics of morals is therefore...

A metaphysics of morals is therefore indispensably necessary, not merely because of a motive to speculation - for investigating the source of the practical basic principles that lie a priori in our reason - but also because morals themselves remain subject to all sorts of corruption as long as we are without that clue and supreme norm by which to appraise them correctly...

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Philosophical Maxims
Herbert Spencer
Herbert Spencer
1 month 3 weeks ago
The primary use of knowledge is...

The primary use of knowledge is for such guidance of conduct under all circumstances as shall make living complete. All other uses of knowledge are secondary.

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Vol. 3, Ch. XV, The Americans
Philosophical Maxims
Ludwig Wittgenstein
Ludwig Wittgenstein
2 months 3 weeks ago
My aim is: to teach you...

My aim is: to teach you to pass from a piece of disguised nonsense to something that is patent nonsense.

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§ 464
Philosophical Maxims
Lucretius
Lucretius
3 months 1 week ago
For as children….

For as children tremble and fear everything in the blind darkness, so we in the light sometimes fear what is no more to be feared than the things that children in the dark hold in terror and imagine will come true. This terror, therefore, and darkness of mind must be dispelled not by the rays of the sun and glittering shafts of daylight, but by the aspect and law of nature.

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Book II, lines 55-61 (tr. Rouse)
Philosophical Maxims
Herbert Spencer
Herbert Spencer
1 month 3 weeks ago
The education of the child must...

The education of the child must accord both in mode and arrangement with the education of mankind, considered historically. In other words, the genesis of knowledge in the individual, must follow the same course as the genesis of knowledge in the race. In strictness, this principle may be considered as already expressed by implication; since both being processes of evolution, must conform to those same general laws of evolution... and must therefore agree with each other. Nevertheless this particular parallelism is of value for the specific guidance it affords. To M. Comte we believe society owes the enunciation of it; and we may accept this item of his philosophy without at all committing ourselves to the rest.

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Philosophical Maxims
Edmund Burke
Edmund Burke
1 month 3 weeks ago
Writers, especially when they act in...

Writers, especially when they act in a body and with one direction, have great influence on the public mind.

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Philosophical Maxims
Henry David Thoreau
Henry David Thoreau
2 months 3 weeks ago
If you are describing any occurrence......

If you are describing any occurrence... make two or more distinct reports at different times... We discriminate at first only a few features, and we need to reconsider our experience from many points of view and in various moods in order to perceive the whole.

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March 24, 1857
Philosophical Maxims
Herbert Marcuse
Herbert Marcuse
1 month 2 weeks ago
The operations of understanding thus divide...

The operations of understanding thus divide the world into numberless polarities, and Hegel uses the expression 'isolated reflection' (isolierte Reflection) to characterize the manner in which understanding forms and connects its polar concepts. The rise and spread of this kind of thinking Hegel connects with the origin and prevalence of crucial relationships in human life. The antagonisms of 'isolated reflections' express real antagonisms. .... Isolation and opposition are not, however, the final state of affairs. The world must not remain a complex of fixed disparates. The unity that underlies the antagonisms must be grasped and realized by reason, which has the task of reconciling the opposites and 'sublimating' them in a true unity.

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P. 45
Philosophical Maxims
St. Augustine of Hippo
St. Augustine of Hippo
3 months 1 week ago
Cantare amantis est. Singing is of...

Singing is of a lover.

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Variant translation: To sing is characteristic of the lover. 336
Philosophical Maxims
Blaise Pascal
Blaise Pascal
3 months 1 week ago
FIRE. God of Abraham, God of Isaac…

FIRE. God of Abraham, God of Isaac, God of Jacob, not of the philosophers and scholars. Certainty. Certainty. Feeling. Joy. Peace.

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Note on a parchment stitched to the lining of Pascal's coat, found by a servant shortly after his death, as quoted in Burkitt Speculum religionis (1929), p. 150
Philosophical Maxims
Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Fyodor Dostoyevsky
1 month 3 weeks ago
A fool with a heart and...

A fool with a heart and no sense is just as unhappy as a fool with sense and no heart.

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Part 1, Chapter 7
Philosophical Maxims
Montesquieu
Montesquieu
1 month 1 week ago
No tyranny is more...

No tyranny is more cruel than the one practiced in the shadow of the laws and under color of justice - when, so to speak, one proceeds to drown the unfortunate on the very plank by which they had saved themselves.

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See Chap. XIV of Considérations sur les causes de la grandeur des Romains et de leur décadence. Considerations on the Causes of the Greatness of the Romans and their Decline (1734), p. 89.
Philosophical Maxims
Michel de Montaigne
Michel de Montaigne
3 months 4 days ago
All the world knows me in...

All the world knows me in my book, and my book in me.

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Book III, Ch. 5. Upon some Verses of Virgil
Philosophical Maxims
John Rawls
John Rawls
2 months 3 weeks ago
Intuitionism is not constructive, perfectionism is...

Intuitionism is not constructive, perfectionism is unacceptable.

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Chapter I, Section 9, pg. 52
Philosophical Maxims
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