Skip to main content

On the stage on which we are observing it, - Universal History - Spirit displays itself in its most concrete reality.

0
0
2 months 1 day ago

The world is the house of the strong. I shall not know until the end what I have lost or won in this place, in this vast gambling den where I have spent more than sixty years, dicebox in hand, shaking the dice.

0
0
Source
source
Conclusion
1 month 3 weeks ago

Long before physics or psychology were born, pain disintegrated matter, and affliction the soul.

0
0
3 months 2 weeks ago

There is no order between created being and non-being, but there is between created and uncreated being.

0
0
Source
source
q. 7, art. 9, ad 8
2 months 4 weeks ago

All the interests of my reason, speculative as well as practical, combine in the three following questions: 1. What can I know? 2. What ought I to do? 3. What may I hope?

0
0
Source
source
B 832-833
1 month 1 week ago

An imaginary perfection is automatically at the same level as I who imagine it - neither higher nor lower.

0
0
Source
source
p. 240
1 month 3 weeks ago

We die in proportion to the words we fling around us.

0
0
2 months 3 weeks ago

Fine manners need the support of fine manners in others.

0
0
Source
source
Behavior
1 month 3 weeks ago

But like the desire for eternal life, the desire for omniscience and absolute perfection is merely an imaginary desire; and, as history and daily experience prove, the supposed human striving for unlimited knowledge and perfection is a myth. Man has no desire to know everything; he only wants to know the things to which he is particularly drawn.

0
0
Source
source
Lecture XXX, Atheism alone a Positive View
3 months 1 week ago

If they have entered into the spirit if these rules, and if the rules have made sufficient impression on them to become rooted and established in their minds, they will feel how much difference there is between what is said here and what a few logicians may perhaps have written by chance approximating to it in a few passages of their works.

0
0
3 months 4 days ago

For as when much superfluous matter has gathered in simple bodies, nature makes repeated efforts to remove and purge it away, thereby promoting the health of these bodies, so likewise as regards that composite body the human race, when every province of the world so teems with inhabitants that they can neither subsist where they are nor remove elsewhere, every region being equally crowded and over-peopled, and when human craft and wickedness have reached their highest pitch, it must needs come about that the world will purge herself in one or another of these three ways, to the end that men, becoming few and contrite, may amend their lives and live with more convenience.

0
0
Source
source
Book 1 Ch. 5 (as translated by Ninian Hill Thomson)
1 month 3 weeks ago

The seat of the soul is where the inner world and the outer world meet. Where they overlap, it is in every point of the overlap.

0
0
1 month 1 week ago

The aim of jazz is the mechanical reproduction of a regressive moment, a castration symbolism. 'Give up your masculinity, let yourself be castrated,' the eunuchlike sound of the jazz band both mocks and proclaims, 'and you will be rewarded, accepted into a fraternity which shares the mystery of impotence with you, a mystery revealed at the moment of the initiation rite.

0
0
Source
source
Perennial Fashion - Jazz (1978), Prisms, p. 129, as translated by Samuel Weber and Shierry Weber
1 month 3 weeks ago

Unconscious assumptions or opinions are the worst enemy of woman; they can even grow into a positively demonic passion that exasperates and disgusts men, and does the woman herself the greatest injury by gradually smothering the charm and meaning of her femininity and driving it into the background. Such a development naturally ends in profound psychological disunion, in short, in a neurosis.

0
0
Source
source
P.245
2 months 4 weeks ago

You shall find, that there cannot be a greater spur to the attaining what you would have the eldest learn, and know himself, than to set him upon teaching it his younger brothers and sisters.

0
0
Source
source
Sec. 119
2 months 4 weeks ago

The first thing to realize, if you wish to become a philosopher, is that most people go through life with a whole world of beliefs that have no sort of rational justification, and that one man's world of beliefs is apt to be incompatible with another man's, so that they cannot both be right. People's opinions are mainly designed to make them feel comfortable; truth, for most people is a secondary consideration.

0
0
Source
source
"How to Become a Philosopher" (1942), in The Art of Philosophizing, and Other Essays (New York: Philosophical Library, 1968), p. 2
2 months 2 weeks ago

The sun provides the moon with its brightness.

0
0
Source
source
Fragment in Plutarch De facie in orbe lunae, 929b, as quoted in The Riverside Dictionary of Biography (2005), p. 23
1 month 3 weeks ago

Nostalgia, more than anything, gives us the shudder of our own imperfection.

0
0
2 months 3 weeks ago

Compared with the greatest poets, he may be said to be the poet of unpoetical natures, possessed of quiet and contemplative tastes. But unpoetical natures are precisely those which require poetic cultivation. This cultivation Wordsworth is much more fitted to give, than poets who are intrinsically far more poets than he.

0
0
Source
source
(p. 149)
1 month 3 weeks ago

Government in reality, as has abundantly appeared, is a question of force, and not of consent. It is desirable that a government should be made as agreeable as possible to the ideas and inclinations of its subjects and that they should be consulted, as extensively as may be, respecting its construction and regulations. But, at last, the best constituted government that can be formed particularly for a large community, will contain many provisions that, far from having obtained the consent of all its members, encounter even in their outset a strenuous, thought ineffectual opposition.

0
0
Source
source
Book III, "Of Obedience"
2 months 3 weeks ago

The thing done avails, and not what is said about it. An original sentence, a step forward, is worth more than all the censures.

0
0
Source
source
First Visit to England
1 month 3 weeks ago

The flesh spreads, further and further, like a gangrene upon the surface of the globe. It cannot impose limits upon itself, it continues to be rife despite its rebuffs, it takes its defeats for conquests, it has never learned anything. It belongs above all to the realm of the Creator, and it is indeed in the flesh that He has projected His maleficent instincts.

0
0
1 month 1 week ago

From whatever side the matter is regarded, it is always found that reason confronts our longing for personal immortality and contradicts it. And the truth is, in all strictness, that reason is the enemy of life.

0
0
2 months 3 weeks ago

A critique is not a matter of saying that things are not right as they are. It is a matter of pointing out on what kinds of assumptions, what kinds of familiar, unchallenged, unconsidered modes of thought the practices that we accept rest.

0
0
Source
source
"Practicing criticism, or, is it really important to think?", interview by Didier Eribon, May 30-31, 1981, in Politics, Philosophy, Culture, ed. L. Kriztman (1988), p. 155
1 month ago

Bullialdus wrote that all force respecting the Sun as its center & depending on matter must be reciprocally in a duplicate ratio of the distance from the center.

0
0
Source
source
Letter to Edmund Halley (June 20, 1686) quoted in I. Bernard Cohen and George E. Smith, ed.s, The Cambridge Companion to Newton (2002) p. 204
2 months 3 weeks ago

An intuitionist conception of justice is, one might say, but half a conception.

0
0
Source
source
Chapter I, Section 8, pg. 41
2 months 2 weeks ago

When the individual finds in her conscience beliefs that are relevant to public policy but incapable of the defense on the basis of beliefs common to her fellow citizens, she must sacrifice her conscience on the altar of public expediency.

0
0
2 months 3 weeks ago

Men go to a fire for entertainment. When I see how eagerly men will run to a fire, whether in warm or in cold weather, by day or by night, dragging an engine at their heels, I'm astonished to perceive how good a purpose the level of excitement is made to serve.

0
0
Source
source
June, 1850
2 months 3 weeks ago

The person who screams, or uses the superlative degree, or converses with heat, puts whole drawing-rooms to flight. If you wish to be loved, love measure. You must have genius or a prodigious usefulness if you will hide the want of measure.

0
0
Source
source
p. 167
2 months 3 weeks ago

If we cannot "practice the presence of God," it is something to practice the absence of God, to become increasingly aware of our unawareness till we feel like man who should stand beside a great cataract and hear no noise, or like a man in a story who looks in a mirror and finds no face there, or a man in a dream who stretches his hand to visible objects and gets no sensation of touch. To know that one is dreaming is to no longer be perfectly asleep. Bur for news of the fully waking world you must go to my betters.

0
0
Source
source
"Charity"
3 months 3 weeks ago

Even Plato assumes that the genuinely perfect condition of man means no sex distinction (and how strange this is for people like Feuerbach who are so occupied with affirming sex-differentiation, regarding which they would do best to appeal to paganism). He assumes that originally there was only the masculine (and when there is no thought of femininity, sex-distinction is undifferentiated), but through degeneration and corruption the feminine appeared. He assumes that base and cowardly men became women in death, but he still gives them hope of being elevated again to masculinity. He thinks that in the perfect life the masculine, as originally, will be the only sex, that is, that sex-distinction is a matter of indifference. So it is in Plato, and this, the idea of the state notwithstanding, was the culmination of his philosophy. How much more so, then, the Christian view.

0
0
2 months 2 weeks ago

The distance between oneself and other persons and other species can fall anywhere on a continuum. Even for other persons the understanding of what it is like to be them is only partial, and when one moves to species very different from oneself, a lesser degree of partial understanding may still be available. The imagination is remarkably flexible. My point, however, is not that we cannot know what it is like to be a bat. I am not raising that epistemological problem. My point is rather that even to form a conception of what it is like to be a bat and a fortiori to know what it is like to be a bat, one must take up the bat's point of view.

0
0
Source
source
p. 172, note 8.
2 months 4 weeks ago

"I don't want to! Why should I?" "Because more people will be happier if you do than if you don't." "So what? I don't care about other people." "You should." "But why?" "Because more people will be happier if you do than if you don't."

0
0
Source
source
Dialogue between Russell and his daughter Katharine, as quoted in My Father - Bertrand Russell, 1975
3 months 4 days ago

I prefer the company of peasants because they have not been educated sufficiently to reason incorrectly.

0
0
1 month 1 week ago

I was aggressively nonpolitical. I believed that people who make a fuss about politics do so because their heads are too empty to think about more important things. So I felt nothing but impatient contempt for Osborne's Jimmy Porter and the rest of the heroes of social protest.

0
0
Source
source
p. 2
2 months 3 weeks ago

The best way to drive out the devil, if he will not yield to texts of Scripture, is to jeer and flout him, for he cannot bear scorn. 

0
0
Source
source
Martin Luther, quoted at the beginning of The Screwtape Letters
2 months 3 weeks ago

Because machines could be made progressively more and more efficient, Western man came to believe that men and societies would automatically register a corresponding moral and spiritual improvement. Attention and allegiance came to be paid, not to Eternity, but to the Utopian future. External circumstances came to be regarded as more important than states of mind about external circumstances, and the end of human life was held to be action, with contemplation as a means to that end. These false and historically, aberrant and heretical doctrines are now systematically taught in our schools and repeated, day in, day out, by those anonymous writers of advertising copy who, more than any other teachers, provide European and American adults with their current philosophy of life. And so effective has been the propaganda that even professing Christians accept the heresy unquestioningly and are quite unconscious of its complete incompatibility with their own or anybody else's religion.

0
0
1 month 3 weeks ago

The tyranny of a multitude is a multiplied tyranny.

0
0
Source
source
Letter to Thomas Mercer
1 month 2 weeks ago

If I compare arithmetic with a tree that unfolds upward into a multitude of techniques and theorems while its root drives into the depths, then it seems to me that the impetus of the root.

0
0
Source
source
Gottlob Frege, Montgomery Furth (1964). The Basic Laws of Arithmetic: Exposition of the System. p. 10
2 months 4 weeks ago

Too little liberty brings stagnation, and too much brings chaos.

0
0
Source
source
Authority and the Individual (1949), p. 37
2 months 1 week ago

Friends are as companions on a journey, who ought to aid each other to persevere in the road to a happier life.

0
0
Source
source
As quoted in Gems of Thought: Being a Collection of More Than a Thousand Choice Selections
1 month 2 weeks ago

The complexity of the connection between the world of perception and the world of physics does not preclude that such a connection can be shown to exist at any time.

0
0
Source
source
p. 133.
3 months 4 days ago

Let us give Nature a chance; she knows her business better than we do.

0
0
Source
source
Ch. 13
2 months 3 weeks ago

The Beatific Vision, Sat Chit Ananda, Being-Awareness-Bliss-for the first time I understood, not on the verbal level, not by inchoate hints or at a distance, but precisely and completely what those prodigious syllables referred to. And then I remembered a passage I had read in one of Suzuki's essays. "What is the Dharma-Body of the Buddha?" ('"the Dharma-Body of the Buddha" is another way of saying Mind, Suchness, the Void, the Godhead.) The question is asked in a Zen monastery by an earnest and bewildered novice. And with the prompt irrelevance of one of the Marx Brothers, the Master answers, "The hedge at the bottom of the garden." "And the man who realizes this truth," the novice dubiously inquires, "what, may I ask, is he?" Groucho gives him a whack over the shoulders with his staff and answers, "A golden-haired lion."

0
0
2 months 3 weeks ago

Farewell to the monsters, farewell to the saints. Farewell to pride. All that is left is men.

0
0
Source
source
Act 10, sc. 4
2 months 3 weeks ago

To believe is to know you believe, and to know you believe is not to believe.

0
0
2 months 1 day ago

They (the emperors) frequently abused their power arbitrarily to deprive their subjects of property or of life: their tyranny was extremely onerous to the few, but it did not reach the greater number; .. But it would seem that if despotism were to be established amongst the democratic nations of our days it might assume a different character; it would be more extensive and more mild, it would degrade men without tormenting them.

0
0
Source
source
Book Four, Chapter VI.
1 month 2 weeks ago

A man is a man to the extent that he is a superman. A man should be defined by the sum of those tendencies which impel him to surpass the human condition.

0
0
Source
source
Introduction

CivilSimian.com created by AxiomaticPanic, CivilSimian, Kalokagathia