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2 weeks 5 days ago
Yes, there was an element of abstraction and unreality in misfortune. But when an abstraction starts to kill you, you have to get to work on it.
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2 weeks 5 days ago
In Oran, as elsewhere, for want of time and thought, people have to love one another without knowing it.
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2 weeks 5 days ago
Can one be a saint without God?, that's the problem, in fact the only problem, I'm up against today.
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2 weeks 5 days ago
The rest of the story, to Grand's thinking, was very simple. The common lot of married couples. You get married, you go on loving a bit longer, you work. And you work so hard that it makes you forget to love.
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2 weeks 5 days ago
Yes, everyone sleeps at that hour, and this is reassuring, since the great longing of an unquiet heart is to possess constantly and consciously the loved one...
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2 weeks 5 days ago
'I'm glad to know he's [Paneloux] better than his sermon.'
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2 weeks 5 days ago
Every revolutionary ends as an oppressor or a heretic.
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Variant translation: Every revolutionary ends by becoming either an oppressor or a heretic.
2 weeks 5 days ago
Nothing can discourage the appetite for divinity in the heart of man.
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2 weeks 5 days ago
For those of us who have been thrown into hell, mysterious melodies and the torturing images of a vanished beauty will always bring us, in the midst of crime and folly, the echo of that harmonious insurrection which bears witness, throughout the centuries, to the greatness of humanity.
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2 weeks 5 days ago
Metaphysical rebellion is a claim, motivated by the concept of a complete unity, against the suffering of life and death and a protest against the human condition both for its incompleteness, thanks to death, and its wastefulness, thanks to evil.
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Part 2: Metaphysical Rebellion
2 weeks 5 days ago
Alyosha can, in fact, treat Ivan with compassion as a "real simpleton." The latter only made an attempt at self-control and failed. Others will appear, with more serious intentions, who, on the basis of the same despairing nihilism, will insist on ruling the world. These are the Grand Inquisitors who imprison Christ and come to tell Him that His method is not correct, that universal happiness cannot be achieved by the immediate freedom of choosing between good and evil, but by the domination and unification of the world. The first step is to conquer and rule. The kingdom of heaven will, in fact, appear on earth, but it will be ruled over by men — a mere handful to begin with, who will be the Caesars, because they were the first to understand — and later, with time, by all men. The unity of all creation will be achieved by every possible means, since everything is permitted. The Grand Inquisitor is old and tired, for the knowledge he possesses is bitter. He knows that men are lazy rather than cowardly and that they prefer peace and death to the liberty of discerning between good and evil. He has pity, a cold pity, for the silent prisoner whom history endlessly deceives. He urges him to speak, to recognize his misdeeds, and, in one sense, to approve the actions of the Inquisitors and of the Caesars. But the prisoner does not speak.
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Part 2: Metaphysical Rebellion
2 weeks 5 days ago
A nihilist is not one who believes in nothing, but one who does not believe in what exists.
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Part 2: Metaphysical Rebellion
2 weeks 5 days ago
The ancients, even though they believed in destiny, believed primarily in nature, in which they participated wholeheartedly. To rebel against nature amounted to rebelling against oneself. It was butting one's head against a wall.
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Part 2: Metaphysical Rebellion
2 weeks 5 days ago
A character is never the author who created him. It is quite likely, however, that an author may be all his characters simultaneously.
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Part 2: Metaphysical Rebellion; also quoted in Albert Camus : The Invincible Summer (1958) by Albert Maquet, p. 86; a remark made about the Marquis de Sade
2 weeks 5 days ago
Art is the activity that exalts and denies simultaneously. "No artist tolerates reality," says Nietzsche.
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Part 4: Rebellion and Art
2 weeks 5 days ago
The artist reconstructs the world to his plan.
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Part 4: Rebellion and Art
2 weeks 5 days ago
Artistic creation is a demand for unity and a rejection of the world.
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Part 4: Rebellion and Art
2 weeks 5 days ago
In every rebellion is to be found the metaphysical demand for unity, the impossibility of capturing it, and the construction of a substitute universe.
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Part 4: Rebellion and Art
2 weeks 5 days ago
Real fulfillment, for the man who allows absolutely free rein to his desires, and who much dominate everything, lies in hatred.
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Part 2: Metaphysical Rebellion
2 weeks 5 days ago
The most elementary form of rebellion, paradoxically, expresses an aspiration for order.
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Part 2: Metaphysical Rebellion
2 weeks 5 days ago
When the throne of God is overturned, the rebel realizes that it is now his own responsibility to create the justice, order, and unity that he sought in vain within his own condition, and in this way to justify the fall of God. Then begins the desperate effort to create, at the price of crime and murder if necessary, the dominion of man.
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2 weeks 5 days ago
"The real saint", Baudelaire pretends to think, "is he who flogs and kills people for their own good." His argument will be heard. A race of real saints is beginning to spread over the earth for the purposes of confirming these curious conclusions about rebellion.
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2 weeks 5 days ago
The words that reverberate for us at the confines of this long adventure of rebellion are not formulas for optimism, for which we have no possible use in the extremities of our unhappiness, but words of courage and intelligence which, on the shores of the eternal seas, even have the qualities of virtue.
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2 weeks 5 days ago
"Then we understand that rebellion cannot exist without a strange form of love. Those who find no rest in God or in history are condemned to live for those who, like themselves, cannot live; in fact, for the humiliated."
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2 weeks 5 days ago
"In the light, the earth remains our first and our last love. Our brothers are breathing under the same sky as we; justice is a living thing. Now is born that strange joy which helps one live and die, and which we shall never again postpone to a later time."
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2 weeks 5 days ago
I rebel — therefore we exist.
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2 weeks 5 days ago
Whatever we may do, excess will always keep its place in the heart of man, in the place where solitude is found. We all carry within us our places of exile, our crimes and our ravages. But our task is not to unleash them on the world; it is to fight them in ourselves and in others.
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2 weeks 5 days ago
Man is the only creature who refuses to be what he is.
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Introduction
2 weeks 5 days ago
With rebellion, awareness is born.
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Part 1: The Rebel
2 weeks 5 days ago
The contradiction is this: man rejects the world as it is, without accepting the necessity of escaping it. In fact, men cling to the world and by far the majority do not want to abandon it.
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Part 4: Rebellion and Art
2 weeks 5 days ago
If there is a sin against life, it consists perhaps not so much in despairing of life as in hoping for another life and in eluding the implacable grandeur of this life.
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[http://books.google.com/books?id=N0bNUqDVKJgC&q=%22If+there+is+a+sin+against+life+it+consists+perhaps+not+so+much+in+despairing+of+life+as+in+hoping+for+another+life+and+in+eluding+the+implacable+grandeur+of+this+life%22&pg=PA153#v=onepage "Summer in Alg
2 weeks 5 days ago
At this point of his effort man stands face to face with the irrational. He feels within him his longing for happiness and for reason. The absurd is born of this confrontation between the human need and the unreasonable silence of the world. This must not be forgotten. This must be clung to because the whole consequence of a life can depend on it. The irrational, the human nostalgia, and the absurd that is born of their encounter — these are the three characters in the drama that must necessarily end with all the logic of which an existence is capable.
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2 weeks 5 days ago
Man cannot do without beauty, and this is what our era pretends to want to disregard. It steels itself to attain the absolute and authority; it wants to transfigure the world before having exhausted it, to set it to rights before having understood it. Whatever it may say, our era is deserting this world.
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"Helen's Exile" (1948)
2 weeks 5 days ago
We turn our backs on nature; we are ashamed of beauty. Our wretched tragedies have a smell of the office clinging to them, and the blood that trickles from them is the color of printer's ink.
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"Helen's Exile" (1948)
2 weeks 5 days ago
We have exiled beauty; the Greeks took up arms for her.
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"Helen's Exile" (1948)
2 weeks 5 days ago
Perhaps we cannot prevent this world from being a world in which children are tortured. But we can reduce the number of tortured children. And if you don't help us, who else in the world can help us do this?
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Said at the Dominican Monastery of Latour-Maubourg (1948); reported in Resistance, Rebellion and Death (translation by Justin O'Brien, 1961), p. 73
2 weeks 5 days ago
It is the failing of a certain literature to believe that life is tragic because it is wretched. Life can be magnificent and overwhelming — that is its whole tragedy. Without beauty, love, or danger it would be almost easy to live. And M. Sartre's hero does not perhaps give us the real meaning of his anguish when he insists on those aspects of man he finds repugnant, instead of basing his reasons for despair on certain of man's signs of greatness. The realization that life is absurd cannot be an end, but only a beginning. This is a truth nearly all great minds have taken as their starting point. It is not this discovery that is interesting, but the consequences and rules of action drawn from it.
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Review of Nausea by Jean-Paul Sartre, published in the newspaper Alger Républicain (20 October 1938), p. 5; also quoted in Albert Camus and the Philosophy of the Absurd (2002) by Avi Sagi, p. 43
2 weeks 5 days ago
A novel is never anything but a philosophy put into images. And in a good novel, the whole of the philosophy has passed into the images. But if once the philosophy overflows the characters and action, and therefore looks like a label stuck on the work, the plot loses its authenticity and the novel its life. Nevertheless, a work that is to last cannot dispense with profound ideas. And this secret fusion between experiences and ideas, between life and reflection on the meaning of life, is what makes the great novelist.
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Review of Nausea by Jean-Paul Sartre, published in the newspaper Alger Républicain (20 October 1938), p. 5; reprinted in Selected Essays and Notebooks, translated and edited by Philip Thody
2 weeks 5 days ago
Nous nous trompons toujours deux fois sur ceux que nous aimons: d'abord à leur avantage, puis à leur désavantage.
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We always deceive ourselves twice about the people we love — first to their advantage, then to their disadvantage. | A Happy Death (written 1938), first published as La mort heureuse (1971), as translated by Richard Howard (1972)
2 weeks 5 days ago
Don't let them tell us stories. Don't let them say of the man sentenced to death "He is going to pay his debt to society," but: "They are going to cut off his head." It looks like nothing. But it does make a little difference. And then there are people who prefer to look their fate in the eye.
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"Entre oui et non" in L'Envers et l'endroit (1937), translated as "Between Yes and No", in World Review magazine (March 1950), also quoted in The Artist and Political Vision (1982) by Benjamin R. Barber and Michael J. Gargas McGrath
2 weeks 5 days ago
No human being, even the most passionately loved and passionately loving, is ever in our possession.
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Part 4: Rebellion and Art
2 weeks 5 days ago
Toute idée fausse finit dans le sang, mais il s'agit toujours du sang des autres. C'est ce qui explique que certains de nos philosophes se sentent à l'aise pour dire n'importe quoi.
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Mistaken ideas always end in bloodshed, but in every case it is someone else's blood. That is why some of our thinkers feel free to say just about anything. | Actuelles I, 1950
2 weeks 5 days ago
Simone Weil, je le sais encore maintenant, est le seul grand esprit de notre temps et je souhaite que ceux qui le reconnaissent en reçoivent assez de modestie pour ne pas essayer d'annexer ce témoignage bouleversant. Pour moi, je serais comblé si l'on pouvait dire qu'à ma place, et avec les faibles moyens dont je dispose, j'ai servi à faire connaître et à répandre son oeuvre dont on n'a pas encore mesuré tout le retentissement.
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Simone Weil, I maintain this now, is the only great spirit of our times and I hope that those who realize this have enough modesty to not try to appropriate her overwhelming witnessing. For my part, I would be satisfied if one could say that in my place,
2 weeks 5 days ago
One does not decide the truth of a thought according to whether it is right-wing or left-wing.
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Letter to Jean-Paul Sartre, 30 June 1952. | As quoted in Paris after the Liberation: 1944-1949 by Antony Beevor and Artemis Cooper.
2 weeks 5 days ago
Autumn is a second Spring when every leaf is a flower.
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As quoted in Visions from Earth (2004) by James R. Miller, p. 126
2 weeks 5 days ago
Ce que, finalement, je sais de plus sûr sur la morale et les obligations des hommes, c'est au football que je le dois.
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"Ce que je sais de plus sûr à propos de la moralité et des obligations des hommes, c'est au sport que je le dois", sentence parfois modifiée en : "C'est au football que je le dois !" | All I know most surely about morality and obligations, I owe to footba
2 weeks 5 days ago
Life continues, and some mornings, weary of the noise, discouraged by the prospect of the interminable work to keep after, sickened also by the madness of the world that leaps at you from the newspaper, finally convinced that I will not be equal to it and that I will disappoint everyone—all I want to do is sit down and wait for evening. This is what I feel like, and sometimes I yield to it.
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"Letter to P.B." in Lyrical and Critical Essays (1970)
2 weeks 5 days ago
Knowing that certain nights whose sweetness lingers will keep returning to the earth and sea after we are gone, yes, this helps us to die.
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"The Sea Close By" in Lyrical and Critical Essays (1970)
2 weeks 5 days ago
Accepting the absurdity of everything around us is one step, a necessary experience: it should not become a dead end. It arouses a revolt that can become fruitful.
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"Three Interviews" in Lyrical and Critical Essays (1970)
2 weeks 5 days ago
There is not love of life without despair about life.
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Preface, Lyrical and Critical Essays (1970)

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