Skip to main content

Main navigation

☰ ˟
  • Home
  • Articulation
  • Contact
  • Shop
John Rawls
John Rawls
2 months 1 week ago
This is a long book, not...

This is a long book, not only in pages.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
Preface, pg. viii
Philosophical Maxims
Denis Diderot
Denis Diderot
1 month 1 week ago
We swallow greedily any lie that...

We swallow greedily any lie that flatters us, but we sip only little by little at a truth we find bitter.

0
⚖0
Philosophical Maxims
Edmund Burke
Edmund Burke
1 month 1 week ago
Deny them this participation of freedom,...

Deny them this participation of freedom, and you break that sole bond, which originally made, and must still preserve the unity of the empire.

0
⚖0
Philosophical Maxims
Michel de Montaigne
Michel de Montaigne
2 months 2 weeks ago
I do myself a greater injury...

I do myself a greater injury in lying than I do him of whom I tell a lie.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
Book II, Ch. 17
Philosophical Maxims
Immanuel Kant
Immanuel Kant
2 months 1 week ago
The question here is not, "How...

The question here is not, "How conscience ought to be guided? For Conscience is its own General and Leader; it is therefore enough that each man have one. What we want to know is, how conscience can be her own Ariadne, and disentangle herself from the mazes even of the most raveled and complicated casuistical theology. Here is an ethical proposition that stands in need of no proof: No Action May At Any Time Be Hazarded On The Uncertainty That Perchance It May Not Be Wrong (Quod dubitas, ne feceris! Pliny - which you doubt, then neither do) Hence the Consciousness, that Any Action I am about to perform is Right, is in itself a most immediate and imperative duty. What actions are right, - what wrong - is a matter for the understanding, not for conscience.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
p. 251 Book IV, Part 2, Section 4
Philosophical Maxims
William James
William James
2 months 1 week ago
Every way of classifying a thing...

Every way of classifying a thing is but a way of handling it for some particular purpose.

0
⚖0
Philosophical Maxims
C. S. Lewis
C. S. Lewis
2 months 1 week ago
Where we find a difficulty we...

Where we find a difficulty we may always expect that a discovery awaits us. Where there is cover we hope for game.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
Reflections on the Psalms (1958), ch. III: Cursings
Philosophical Maxims
Friedrich Nietzsche
Friedrich Nietzsche
3 months 1 week ago
We believe that we know something...
We believe that we know something about the things themselves when we speak of trees, colors, snow, and flowers; and yet we possess nothing but metaphors for things, metaphors which correspond in no way to the original entities.
0
⚖0
Philosophical Maxims
Peter Singer
Peter Singer
1 month 4 weeks ago
We are responsible not only for...

We are responsible not only for what we do but also for what we could have prevented.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
Introduction (p. xv)
Philosophical Maxims
comfortdragon
comfortdragon
3 weeks 1 day ago
Philosophy unravels the knots...
0
⚖0
Main Content / General
Colin Wilson
Colin Wilson
3 weeks 1 day ago
This provides us with our first...

This provides us with our first major clue to the solutions of the problem. Even if the left cannot see the world as full of potentiality, it can hold on to the moments of insight and refuse to let go of them. If I know that present difficulties will end in triumph, I am un-discourageable; I merely have to know it intellectually. And if I can 'know' that reality actually has a third dimension, I shall never fall into the mistake of complaining that there is nothing new under the sun and that life is futile.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
p. 13
Philosophical Maxims
Miguel de Unamuno
Miguel de Unamuno
3 weeks 4 days ago
"God does not think, He creates;...

"God does not think, He creates; He does not exist, He is eternal," wrote Kierkegaard (Afslutende uvidenskabelige Efterskrift); but perhaps it is more exact to say with Mazzini, the mystic of the Italian city, that "God is great because his thought is action" (Ai giovani d'Italila), because with Him to think is to create, and He gives existence to that which exists in His thought by the mere fact of thinking it, and the impossible is unthinkable by God. It is not written in the Scriptures that God creates with His word - that is to say, with His thought - and that by this, by His Word, He made everything that exists? And what God has once made does He ever forget? May it not be that all the thoughts that have ever passed through the Supreme Consciousness still subsist therein? In Him, who is eternal, is not all existence eternalized?

0
⚖0
Philosophical Maxims
Aristotle
Aristotle
3 months 1 week ago
The third kind of life is...

The third kind of life is the life of contemplation.

0
⚖0
Philosophical Maxims
Aristotle
Aristotle
3 months 1 week ago
.... In a word, acts of...

.... In a word, acts of any kind produce habits or characters of the same kind. Hence we ought to make sure that our acts are of a certain kind; for the resulting character varies as they vary. It makes no small difference, therefore, whether a man be trained in his youth up in this way or that, but a great difference, or rather all the difference.

0
⚖0
Philosophical Maxims
Herbert Marcuse
Herbert Marcuse
1 month 1 day ago
Our mass media have little difficulty...

Our mass media have little difficulty in selling particular interests as those of all sensible men. The political needs of society become individual needs and aspirations, their satisfaction promotes business and the commonweal, and the whole appeals to be the very embodiment of Reason.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
p. xli
Philosophical Maxims
Horace
Horace
1 month 4 weeks ago
What is to prevent….

What is to prevent one from telling truth as he laughs, even as teachers sometimes give cookies to children to coax them into learning their A B C?

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
Book I, satire i, line 24 (translation by H. Fairclough)
Philosophical Maxims
Immanuel Kant
Immanuel Kant
2 months 1 week ago
Nature made women mature early and...

Nature made women mature early and had them demand gentle and polite treatment from men, so that they would find themselves imperceptibly fettered by a child due to their own magnanimity; and they would find themselves brought, if not quite to morality itself, then at least to that which cloaks it, moral behavior, which is the preparation and introduction to morality.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
Kant, Immanuel (1996), pages 219-220
Philosophical Maxims
Jean Jacques Rousseau
Jean Jacques Rousseau
2 months 1 week ago
Days of absence, sad and dreary, Clothed...

Days of absence,

sad and dreary, 

Clothed in sorrow's dark array,

Days of absence, I am weary: She I love is far away.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
Day of Absence, reported in Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919).
Philosophical Maxims
Bertrand Russell
Bertrand Russell
2 months 1 week ago
When I come to my own...

When I come to my own beliefs, I find myself quite unable to discern any purpose in the universe, and still more unable to wish to discern one.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
"Is There a God?", 1952
Philosophical Maxims
Gottlob frege
Gottlob frege
1 month 1 day ago
Being true is different from being...

Being true is different from being taken as true, whether by one or by many or everybody, and in no case is it to be reduced to it. There is no contradiction in something's being true which everybody takes to be false. I understand by 'laws of logic' not psychological laws of takings-to-be-true, but laws of truth. ...If being true is thus independent of being acknowledged by somebody or other, then the laws of truth are not psychological laws: they are boundary stones set in an eternal foundation, which our thought can overflow, but never displace. It is because of this that they have authority for our thought if it would attain truth. They do not bear the relation to thought that the laws of grammar bear to language; they do not make explicit the nature of our human thinking and change as it changes.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
Introduction, Tr. Montgomery Furth
Philosophical Maxims
C. S. Lewis
C. S. Lewis
2 months 1 week ago
Wisdom: The first error is that...

Wisdom: The first error is that of the southern people, and it consists in holding that these eastern and western places are real places. ... give no quarter to that thought, whether it threatens you with fear, or tempts you with hopes. For this is Superstition and all who believe it will come in the end to the swamps to the south and the jungles to the far south.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
Part of the same error is to think that the Landlord is a real man: Pilgrim's Regress 117
Philosophical Maxims
Herbert Marcuse
Herbert Marcuse
1 month 1 day ago
Loren von Stein thus turned the...

Loren von Stein thus turned the dialectic into an ensemble of objective laws calling for social reform as the adequate solution of all contradictions and neutralized the critical elements of the dialectic.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
P. 388
Philosophical Maxims
Novalis
Novalis
1 month 6 days ago
There are ideal series of events...

There are ideal series of events which run parallel with the real ones. They rarely coincide. Men and circumstances generally modify the ideal train of events, so that it seems imperfect, and its consequences are equally imperfect. Thus with the Reformation; instead of Protestantism came Lutheranism.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
Epigraph, "The Mystery Of Marie Rogêt" (1842) by Edgar Allan Poe, adapted from Fragments from German Prose Writers (1841) by Sarah Austin
Philosophical Maxims
Edmund Burke
Edmund Burke
1 month 1 week ago
For my part for one, though...

For my part for one, though I make no doubt of preferring the antient Course, or almost any other to this vile chimera, and sick mans dream of Government yet I could not actively, or with a good heart, and clear conscience, go to the establishment of a monarchical despotism in the place of this system of Anarchy.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
Letter to Richard Burke (26 September 1791), quoted in Alfred Cobban and Robert A. Smith (eds.), The Correspondence of Edmund Burke, Volume VI: July 1789-December 1791 (1967), p. 414
Philosophical Maxims
William James
William James
2 months 1 week ago
To plead the organic causation of...

To plead the organic causation of a religious state of mind, then, in refutation of its claim to possess superior spiritual value, is quite illogical and arbitrary, unless one have already worked out in advance some psycho-physical theory connecting spiritual values in general with determinate sorts of physiological change. Otherwise none of our thoughts and feelings, not even our scientific doctrines, not even our dis-beliefs, could retain any value as revelations of the truth, for every one of them without exception flows from the state of their possessor's body at the time.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
Lecture I, "Religion and Neurology"
Philosophical Maxims
Peter Singer
Peter Singer
1 month 4 weeks ago
Neither our distance from a preventable...

Neither our distance from a preventable evil nor the number of other people who, in respect to that evil, are in the same situation as we are, lessens our obligation to mitigate or prevent that evil.

0
⚖0
Philosophical Maxims
Friedrich Nietzsche
Friedrich Nietzsche
3 months 1 week ago
Art furnishes us with eyes and...
Art furnishes us with eyes and hands and above all the good conscience to be able to turn ourselves into such a phenomenon.
0
⚖0
Philosophical Maxims
Jesus
Jesus
1 month 1 day ago
Moses because of the hardness of...

Moses because of the hardness of your hearts suffered you to put away your wives: but from the beginning it was not so. And I say unto you, Whosoever shall put away his wife, except it be for fornication, and shall marry another, committeth adultery: and whoso marrieth her which is put away doth commit adultery.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
19:8-9 (KJV)
Philosophical Maxims
Alfred North Whitehead
Alfred North Whitehead
3 weeks 2 days ago
The deepest definition of youth is...

The deepest definition of youth is life as yet untouched by tragedy.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
p. 285.
Philosophical Maxims
Friedrich Nietzsche
Friedrich Nietzsche
3 months 1 week ago
That which does not kill us...
That which does not kill us makes us stronger.
0
⚖0
Philosophical Maxims
William James
William James
2 months 1 week ago
The concrete man has but one...

The concrete man has but one interest - to be right. That to him is the art of all arts, and all means are fair which help him to it.

0
⚖0
Philosophical Maxims
Mary Wollstonecraft
Mary Wollstonecraft
1 month 6 days ago
A standing army, for instance, is...

A standing army, for instance, is incompatible with freedom; because subordination and rigour are the very sinews of military discipline; and despotism is necessary to give vigour to enterprise that one will directs. A spirit inspired by romantic notions of honour, a kind of morality founded on the fashion of the age, can only be felt by a few officers, whilst the main body must be moved by command, like the waves of the sea; for the strong wind of authority pushes the crowd of subalterns forward, they scarcely know or care why, with headlong fury.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
Ch. 1
Philosophical Maxims
Hannah Arendt
Hannah Arendt
2 months 1 week ago
Real power begins where secrecy begins....

Real power begins where secrecy begins.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
Part 3, Ch. 12, § 1
Philosophical Maxims
John Dewey
John Dewey
1 month ago
In all ranges of experience, externality...

In all ranges of experience, externality of means defines the mechanical.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
p. 206
Philosophical Maxims
Søren Kierkegaard
Søren Kierkegaard
3 months 1 week ago
Deep within every human being there...

Deep within every human being there still lives the anxiety over the possibility of being alone in the world, forgotten by God, overlooked among the millions and millions in this enormous household. One keeps this anxiety at a distance by looking at the many round about who are related to him as kin and friends, but the anxiety is still there, nevertheless, and one hardly dares think of how he would feel if all this were taken away.

0
⚖0
Philosophical Maxims
Michel de Montaigne
Michel de Montaigne
2 months 2 weeks ago
Amongst so many borrowed things, I...

Amongst so many borrowed things, I am glad if I can steal one, disguising and altering it for some new service.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
Book III, Ch. 12. Of Physiognomy
Philosophical Maxims
Karl Marx
Karl Marx
2 months 1 week ago
Political Economy regards the proletarian ......

Political Economy regards the proletarian ... like a horse, he must receive enough to enable him to work. It does not consider him, during the time when he is not working, as a human being. It leaves this to criminal law, doctors, religion, statistical tables, politics, and the beadle. ... (1) What is the meaning, in the development of mankind, of this reduction of the greater part of mankind to abstract labor? (2) What mistakes are made by the piecemeal reformers, who either want to raise wages and thereby improve the situation of the working class, or - like Proudhon - see equality of wages as the goal of social revolution?.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
First Manuscript - Wages of Labour, p. 6.
Philosophical Maxims
Michel Foucault
Michel Foucault
2 months 3 days ago
The perfect disciplinary apparatus would make...

The perfect disciplinary apparatus would make it possible for a single haze to see everything constantly. A central point would be both the source of light illuminating everything, and a locus of convergence for everything that must be known: a perfect eye that nothing would escape and a centre towards which all gazes would be turned.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
Part Three, The Means of Correct Training
Philosophical Maxims
Marshall McLuhan
Marshall McLuhan
6 days ago
Electric circuitry profoundly involves men with...

Electric circuitry profoundly involves men with one another. Information pours upon us, instantaneously and continuously.

0
⚖0
Philosophical Maxims
Hannah Arendt
Hannah Arendt
2 months 1 week ago
Power and violence are opposites; where...

Power and violence are opposites; where the one rules absolutely, the other is absent. Violence appears where power is in jeopardy, but left to its own course it ends in power's disappearance.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
"On Violence"
Philosophical Maxims
Carl Jung
Carl Jung
1 month 5 days ago
As far as we can discern,...

As far as we can discern, the sole purpose of human existence is to kindle a light in the darkness of mere being.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
p. 326
Philosophical Maxims
Michel de Montaigne
Michel de Montaigne
2 months 2 weeks ago
When I am attacked by gloomy...

When I am attacked by gloomy thoughts, nothing helps me so much as running to my books. They quickly absorb me and banish the clouds from my mind.

0
⚖0
Philosophical Maxims
Plato
Plato
3 months 6 days ago
For once touched by love, everyone...

For once touched by love, everyone becomes a poet.

0
⚖0
Philosophical Maxims
C. S. Lewis
C. S. Lewis
2 months 1 week ago
According to Christian teachers, the essential...

According to Christian teachers, the essential vice, the utmost evil, is Pride. Unchastity, anger, greed, drunkenness, and all that, are mere fleabites in comparison: it was through Pride that the devil became the devil: Pride leads to every other vice: it is the complete anti-God state of mind.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
Book III, Chapter 8, "The Great Sin"
Philosophical Maxims
John Stuart Mill
John Stuart Mill
2 months 1 week ago
We are told that a utilitarian...

We are told that a utilitarian will be apt to make his own particular case an exception to moral rules, and, when under temptation, will see a utility in the breach of a rule, greater than he will see in its observance. But is utility the only creed which is able to furnish us with excuses for evil doing, and means of cheating our own conscience? They are afforded in abundance by all doctrines which recognise as a fact in morals the existence of conflicting considerations; which all doctrines do, that have been believed by sane persons. It is not the fault of any creed, but of the complicated nature of human affairs, that rules of conduct cannot be so framed as to require no exceptions, and that hardly any kind of action can safely be laid down as either always obligatory or always condemnable.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
Ch. 2
Philosophical Maxims
Aristotle
Aristotle
3 months 1 week ago
But the greatest thing by far...

But the greatest thing by far is to have a command of metaphor. This alone cannot be imparted by another; it is the mark of genius, for to make good metaphors implies an eye for resemblances.

0
⚖0
Philosophical Maxims
Friedrich Engels
Friedrich Engels
1 month 4 days ago
Community of women is a condition...

Community of women is a condition which belongs entirely to bourgeois society and which today finds its complete expression in prostitution. But prostitution is based on private property and falls with it. Thus, communist society, instead of introducing community of women, in fact abolishes it.

0
⚖0
Philosophical Maxims
Mary Wollstonecraft
Mary Wollstonecraft
1 month 6 days 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.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
Letter to Gilbert Imlay
Philosophical Maxims
Karl Marx
Karl Marx
2 months 1 week ago
The unity is brought about by...

The unity is brought about by force.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
Notebook I, The Chapter on Money, p. 70.
Philosophical Maxims
Lucretius
Lucretius
2 months 3 weeks ago
Therefore death is nothing…

Therefore death is nothing to us, it matters not one jot, since the nature of the mind is understood to be mortal.

0
⚖0
▼ Source
source
Book III, lines 830-831 (tr. Rouse)
Philosophical Maxims
  • Load More

User login

  • Create new account
  • Reset your password

Social

☰ ˟
  • Main Feed
  • Philosophical Maxims

Civic

☰ ˟
  • Propositions
  • Issue / Solution

Who's new

  • Søren Kierkegaard
  • Jesus
  • Friedrich Nietzsche
  • VeXed
  • Slavoj Žižek

Who's online

There are currently 0 users online.

CivilSimian.com created by AxiomaticPanic, CivilSimian, Kalokagathia