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Jean Baudrillard
Jean Baudrillard
6 days ago
To dissimulate is to pretend not...

To dissimulate is to pretend not to have what one has. To simulate is to feign to have what one doesn't have. One implies a presence, the other an absence. But it is more complicated than that because simulating is not pretending: "Whoever fakes an illness can simply stay in bed and make everyone believe he is ill. Whoever simulates an illness produces in himself some of the symptoms" (Littré). Therefore, pretending, or dissimulating, leaves the principle of reality intact: the difference is always clear, it is simply masked, whereas simulation threatens the difference between the "true" and the "false," the "real" and the "imaginary."

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"The Precession of Simulacra," p. 3
Philosophical Maxims
Leo Tolstoy
Leo Tolstoy
3 days ago
The vocation of every man and...

The vocation of every man and woman is to serve other people.

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What Is To Be Done? (1886) Chap. XL
Philosophical Maxims
Gottfried Leibniz
Gottfried Leibniz
2 months 1 week ago
To love is to be delighted...

To love is to be delighted by the happiness of someone, or to experience pleasure upon the happiness of another. I define this as true love.

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The Elements of True Piety (c. 1677), The Shorter Leibniz Texts (2006) edited by Lloyd H. Strickland, p. 189
Philosophical Maxims
Thomas Aquinas
Thomas Aquinas
2 months 3 weeks ago
Reason in man is rather like...

Reason in man is rather like God in the world.

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Opuscule II, De Regno On Kingship, c. 1267
Philosophical Maxims
Charles Sanders Peirce
Charles Sanders Peirce
4 weeks 1 day ago
Fifth, in what measure this unification...

Fifth, in what measure this unification acts, seems to be regulated only by special rules; or, at least, we cannot in our present knowledge say how far it goes. But it may be said that, judging by appearances, the amount of arbitrariness in the phenomenon of human minds is neither altogether trifling nor very prominent.

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Philosophical Maxims
Herbert Marcuse
Herbert Marcuse
3 weeks 5 days ago
In the Platonic dialectic, ... the...

In the Platonic dialectic, ... the terms "Being" "Non-being" "Movement," "the One and the Many" "Identity" and "Contradiction" are methodically kept open, ambiguous, not fully defined. They have an open horizon, an entire universe of meaning which is gradually structured in the process of communication itself, but which is never closed. The propositions are submitted, developed, and tested in a dialogue, in which the partner is led to question the normally unquestioned universe of experience and speech, and to enter a new dimension of discourse - otherwise he is free and the discourse is addressed to his freedom. He is supposed to go beyond that which is given to him - as the speaker, in his proposition, goes beyond the initial setting of the terms. These terms have many meanings because the conditions to which they refer have many sides, implications, and effects which cannot be insulated and stabilized.

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p. 131
Philosophical Maxims
Publilius Syrus
Publilius Syrus
Just now
The poor man is ruined as...

The poor man is ruined as soon as he begins to ape the rich.

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Maxim 941
Philosophical Maxims
Henri Bergson
Henri Bergson
3 weeks 5 days ago
Why did we obey? The question...

Why did we obey? The question hardly occurred to us. We had formed the habit of deferring to our parents and teachers. All the same we knew very well that it was because they were our parents, because they were our teachers. Therefore, in our eyes, their authority came less from themselves than from their status in relation to us.

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Chapter I: Moral Obligation
Philosophical Maxims
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
2 months 4 days ago
Serious occupation is labor that has...

Serious occupation is labor that has reference to some want.

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Pt. I, sec. 2, ch. 1
Philosophical Maxims
José Ortega y Gasset
José Ortega y Gasset
3 weeks 3 days 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
Carl Jung
Carl Jung
4 weeks 1 day ago
People will do anything, no matter...

People will do anything, no matter how absurd, in order to avoid facing their own souls. They will practice Indian yoga and all its exercises, observe a strict regimen of diet, learn the literature of the whole world-all because they cannot get on with themselves and have not the slightest faith that anything useful could ever come out of their own souls. Thus the soul has gradually been turned into a Nazareth from which nothing good can come.

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CW 12, par. 126 (p 99)
Philosophical Maxims
Plato
Plato
3 months 1 day ago
Moreover, there is a victory and...

Moreover, there is a victory and defeat, the first and best of victories, the lowest and worst of defeat, which each man gains or sustains at the hands, not of another, but of himself; this shows that there is a war against ourselves going on within every one of us. Book I Sometimes paraphrased as "The first and best victory is to conquer self".

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Philosophical Maxims
Marshall McLuhan
Marshall McLuhan
1 day ago
Art is anything you can get...

Art is anything you can get away with.

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Philosophical Maxims
Edmund Burke
Edmund Burke
1 month 4 days ago
Nothing made a happy slave, but...

Nothing made a happy slave, but a degraded man. In proportion as the mind grew callous to its degradation, and all sense of manly pride was lost, the slave felt comfort. In fact, he was no longer a man. If he were to define a man, he would say with Shakspeare,"Man is a being, holding large discourse,Looking before and after."A slave was incapable of either looking before or after.

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Speech in the House of Commons (12 May 1789), quoted in The Parliamentary History of England, From the Earliest Period to the Year 1803, Vol. XXVIII (1816), column 71
Philosophical Maxims
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Ralph Waldo Emerson
2 months 3 days ago
The sublime is excited in me...

The sublime is excited in me by the great stoical doctrine, Obey thyself.

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p. 14
Philosophical Maxims
John Dewey
John Dewey
3 weeks 4 days ago
Coleridge said that every work of...

Coleridge said that every work of art must have about it something not understood to obtain its full effect.

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p. 202
Philosophical Maxims
Edmund Burke
Edmund Burke
1 month 4 days ago
I decline the election. - It...

I decline the election. - It has ever been my rule through life, to observe a proportion between my efforts and my objects. I have never been remarkable for a bold, active, and sanguine pursuit of advantages that are personal to myself.

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Speech at Bristol on declining the poll (9 September 1780), quoted in The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke, Vol. II (1855), p. 170
Philosophical Maxims
Auguste Comte
Auguste Comte
1 month 1 week ago
To understand a science it is...

To understand a science it is necessary to know its history.

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A Course of Positive Philosophy (1832 - 1842) [Six volumes]
Philosophical Maxims
Emil Cioran
Emil Cioran
4 weeks 1 day ago
To suffer is to produce knowledge.

To suffer is to produce knowledge.

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Philosophical Maxims
Ludwig Andreas Feuerbach
Ludwig Andreas Feuerbach
1 month 3 days ago
Pantheism makes God into a present,...

Pantheism makes God into a present, real, and material being; empiricism - to which rationalism also belongs - makes God into an absent, remote, unreal, and negative being. Empiricism does not deny God existence, but denies him all positive determinations, because their content is supposed to be only finite and empirical; the infinite cannot, therefore, be an object for man. But the more determinations I deny to a being, the more do I cut it of[ from myself, and the less power and influence do I concede to it over me, the freer do I make myself of it. The more qualities I possess, the more I am for others, and the greater is the extent of my influence and effects. And the more one is, the more one is known to others. Hence, each negation of an attribute of God is a partial atheism, a sphere of godlessness.

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Part I, Section 16
Philosophical Maxims
John Searle
John Searle
6 days ago
There are clear cases in which...

There are clear cases in which "understanding" literally applies and clear cases in which it does not apply; and these two sorts of cases are all I need for this argument.

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Philosophical Maxims
Michel de Montaigne
Michel de Montaigne
2 months 1 week ago
The souls of emperors and cobblers...

The souls of emperors and cobblers are cast in the same mold...The same reason that makes us wrangle with a neighbor creates a war betwixt princes.

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Ch. 12, tr. Cotton, rev. W. Carew Hazlitt, 1877
Philosophical Maxims
Aldous Huxley
Aldous Huxley
2 months 3 days ago
For in spite of language, in...

For in spite of language, in spite of intelligence and intuition and sympathy, one can never really communicate anything to anybody.

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"Sermons in Cats"
Philosophical Maxims
Marshall McLuhan
Marshall McLuhan
1 day ago
The space of early Greek cosmology...

The space of early Greek cosmology was structured by logos - resonant utterance or word.

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p. 35
Philosophical Maxims
Mikhail Bakunin
Mikhail Bakunin
1 month 1 day ago
The liberty of man consists solely...

The liberty of man consists solely in this: that he obeys natural laws because he has himself recognized them as such, and not because they have been externally imposed upon him by any extrinsic will whatever, divine or human, collective or individual.

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Philosophical Maxims
Democritus
Democritus
1 month 3 weeks ago
We know nothing accurately in reality,...

We know nothing accurately in reality, but [only] as it changes according to the bodily condition, and the constitution of those things that flow upon [the body] and impinge upon it.

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Freeman (1948), p. 142
Philosophical Maxims
Bertrand Russell
Bertrand Russell
2 months 4 days ago
We thus have a kind of...

We thus have a kind of see-saw: first, pure persuasion leading to the conversion of a minority; then force exerted to secure that the rest of the community shall be exposed to the right propaganda; and finally a genuine belief on the part of the great majority, which makes the use of force again unnecessary.

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Ch. 9: Power over opinion
Philosophical Maxims
Miguel de Unamuno
Miguel de Unamuno
2 weeks 6 days ago
A terrible thing is intelligence. It...

A terrible thing is intelligence. It tends to death as memory tends to stability. The living, the absolutely unstable, the absolutely individual, is strictly unintelligible. Logic tends to reduce everything to identities and genera, to each representation having no more than one self-same content in whatever place, time or relation it may occur to us. And there is nothing that remains for two successive moments of its existence. My idea of God is different each time that I conceive it. Identity, which is death, is the goal of the intellect. The mind seeks what is dead, for what is living escapes it; it seeks to congeal the flowing stream in blocks of ice; it seeks to arrest it. In order to analyze a body it is necessary to extenuate or destroy it. In order to understand anything it is necessary to kill it, to lay it out rigid in the mind.

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Philosophical Maxims
Emma Goldman
Emma Goldman
2 weeks 2 days ago
Atheism ... in its philosophic aspect...

Atheism ... in its philosophic aspect refuses allegiance not merely to a definite concept of God, but it refuses all servitude to the God idea, and opposes the theistic principle as such. Gods in their individual function are not half as pernicious as the principle of theism which represents the belief in a supernatural, or even omnipotent, power to rule the earth and man upon it. It is the absolutism of theism, its pernicious influence upon humanity, its paralyzing effect upon thought and action, which Atheism is fighting with all its power.

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Philosophical Maxims
Immanuel Kant
Immanuel Kant
2 months 6 days 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
Karl Marx
Karl Marx
2 months 3 days ago
Association, applied to land, shares the...

Association, applied to land, shares the economic advantage of large-scale landed property, and first brings to realization the original tendency inherent in land-division, namely, equality. In the same way association also re-establishes, now on a rational basis, no longer mediated by serfdom, overlordship and the silly mysticism of property, the intimate ties of man with the earth, since the earth ceases to be an object of huckstering, and through free labour and free enjoyment becomes once more a true personal property of man.

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Rent of Land, p. 65.
Philosophical Maxims
Karl Marx
Karl Marx
2 months 3 days ago
It is a bad thing to...

It is a bad thing to perform menial duties even for the sake of freedom; to fight with pinpricks, instead of with clubs. I have become tired of hypocrisy, stupidity, gross arbitrariness, and of our bowing and scraping, dodging, and hair-splitting over words. Consequently, the government has given me back my freedom.

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Letter from Marx to Arnold Ruge (25 January 1843)
Philosophical Maxims
Epictetus
Epictetus
2 months 2 weeks ago
We ought neither to fasten our...

We ought neither to fasten our ship to one small anchor nor our life to a single hope.

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Fragment 30 (Oldfather translation)
Philosophical Maxims
Karl Marx
Karl Marx
2 months 3 days ago
The bourgeoisie has stripped of its...

The bourgeoisie has stripped of its halo every occupation hitherto honoured and looked up to with reverent awe. It has converted the physician, the lawyer, the priest, the poet, the man of science, into its paid wage labourers.

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Section 1, paragraph 14.
Philosophical Maxims
Adam Smith
Adam Smith
2 months 1 week ago
The violence and injustice of the...

The violence and injustice of the rulers of mankind is an ancient evil, for which, I am afraid, the nature of human affairs can scarce admit a remedy.

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Chapter III, Part II, p. 531.
Philosophical Maxims
C. S. Lewis
C. S. Lewis
2 months 2 days ago
Every story of conversion is the...

Every story of conversion is the story of a blessed defeat.

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Foreword to Joy Davidman's Smoke on the Mountain, 1954
Philosophical Maxims
bell hooks
bell hooks
2 weeks 3 days ago
While it is in no way...

While it is in no way racist for any author to write a book exclusively about white women, it is fundamentally racist for books to be published that focus solely on the American white woman's experience in which that experience is assumed to be the American woman's experience.

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Philosophical Maxims
Michel Foucault
Michel Foucault
1 month 3 weeks ago
The man described for us, whom...

The man described for us, whom we are invited to free, is already in himself the effect of a subjection much more profound than himself. A 'soul' inhabits him and brings him to existence...the soul is the effect and instrument of political anatomy; the soul is the prison of the body.

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Philosophical Maxims
comfortdragon
comfortdragon
1 week ago
Don't get involved...
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Main Content / General
Edmund Burke
Edmund Burke
1 month 4 days ago
Early and provident fear is the...

Early and provident fear is the mother of safety.

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Speech on the Petition of the Unitarians (11 May 1792), volume vii, p. 50
Philosophical Maxims
Colin Wilson
Colin Wilson
2 weeks 2 days ago
When I'm bored, my sense of...

When I'm bored, my sense of values goes to sleep. But it's not dead, only asleep. A crisis can wake it up and make the world seem infinitely important and interesting. But what I need to learn is the trick of shaking them awake myself . . . And incidentally, another name for the sense of values is intelligence. A stupid person is a person whose values are narrow.

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p. 57
Philosophical Maxims
Hannah Arendt
Hannah Arendt
2 months 2 days ago
The most radical revolutionary will become...

The most radical revolutionary will become a conservative the day after the revolution.

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The New Yorker
Philosophical Maxims
Friedrich Schlegel
Friedrich Schlegel
1 month 4 days ago
The most important subject, and the...

The most important subject, and the first problem of philosophy, is the restoration in man of the lost image of God; so far as this relates to science.Should this restoration in the internal consciousness be fully understood, and really brought about, the object of pure philosophy is attained.

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Philosophical Maxims
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Ralph Waldo Emerson
2 months 3 days ago
The imagination is not a talent...

The imagination is not a talent of some men but is the health of every man.

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Poetry and Imagination
Philosophical Maxims
Giordano Bruno
Giordano Bruno
1 month 1 week ago
Before anything else the One must...

Before anything else the One must exist eternally; from his power derives everything that always is or will ever be. He is the Eternal and embraces all times. He knows profoundly all events and He himself is everything. He creates everything beyond any beginning of time and beyond any limit of place and space. He is not subject to any numerical law, or to any law of measure or order. He himself is law, number, measure, limit without limit, end without end, act without form.

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VIII 2, as quoted in The Acentric Labyrinth (1995) by Ramon Mendoza
Philosophical Maxims
Isaiah Berlin
Isaiah Berlin
3 weeks 4 days ago
Everything is what it is: liberty...

Everything is what it is: liberty is liberty, not equality or fairness or justice or culture, or human happiness or a quiet conscience.

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Philosophical Maxims
Jean Paul Sartre
Jean Paul Sartre
2 months 2 days ago
The real nature of the present...

The real nature of the present revealed itself: it was what exists, all that was not present did not exist.

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Philosophical Maxims
Simone Weil
Simone Weil
2 weeks 5 days ago
The respect inspired by the link...

The respect inspired by the link between man and the reality alien to this world can make itself evident to that part of man which belongs to the reality of this world. The reality of this world is necessity. The part of man which is in this world is the part which is in bondage to necessity and subject to the misery of need. The one possibility of indirect expression of respect for the human being is offered by men's needs, the needs of the soul and of the body, in this world.

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Philosophical Maxims
C. S. Lewis
C. S. Lewis
2 months 2 days ago
Look for yourself, and you will...

Look for yourself, and you will find in the long run only hatred, loneliness, despair, rage, ruin, and decay. But look for Christ and you will find Him, and with Him everything else thrown in.

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Book IV, Chapter 10, "The New Men"
Philosophical Maxims
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
2 months 4 days ago
In history, we are concerned with...

In history, we are concerned with what has been and what is; in philosophy, however, we are concerned not with what belongs exclusively to the past or to the future, but with that which is, both now and eternally - in short, with reason.

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As translated by H. B. Nisbet, 1975
Philosophical Maxims
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