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Emil Cioran
Emil Cioran
4 months 1 week ago
The fear of your own solitude,...

The fear of your own solitude, of its vast surface and its infinity... Remorse is the voice of solitude. And what does this whispering voice say? Everything in us that is not human anymore.

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Philosophical Maxims
Aldous Huxley
Aldous Huxley
5 months 1 week ago
Stupidity or reason? Oh, there was...

Stupidity or reason? Oh, there was no choice now. It was imbecility every time.

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The Gioconda smile, in Mortal Coils, 1921
Philosophical Maxims
Karl Jaspers
Karl Jaspers
4 months 1 day ago
The Greek word for philosopher (philosophos)...

The Greek word for philosopher (philosophos) connotes a distinction from sophos. It signifies the lover of wisdom (knowledge) as distinguished from him who considers himself wise in the possession of knowledge. This meaning of the word still endures: the essence of philosophy is not the possession of the truth but the search for truth. ... Philosophy means to be on the way. Its questions are more essential than its answers, and every answer becomes a new question.

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Way to Wisdom: An Introduction to Philosophy (1951) as translated by Ralph Mannheim, Ch. 1, What is Philosophy?, p. 12
Philosophical Maxims
George Santayana
George Santayana
4 months 3 days ago
... I once shook hands with...

... I once shook hands with Longfellow at a garden party in 1881; and I often saw Dr. Holmes, who was our neighbor in Beacon Street: but Emerson I never saw.

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p. 50
Philosophical Maxims
Adam Smith
Adam Smith
5 months 2 weeks ago
The administration of the great system...

The administration of the great system of the universe, however, the care of the universal happiness of all rational and sensible beings, is the business of God and not of man. To man is allotted a much humbler department, but one much more suitable to the weakness of his powers, and to the narrowness of his comprehension; the care of his own happiness, of that of his family, his friends, his country: that he is occupied in contemplating the more sublime, can never be an excuse for his neglecting the more humble department.

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Section II, Chap. III.
Philosophical Maxims
John Gray
John Gray
2 months 2 weeks ago
Like other human freedoms, the freedoms...

Like other human freedoms, the freedoms embodied in market institutions are justified inasmuch as they meet human needs. Insofar as they fail to do this they can reasonably be altered. This is true not only of the rights that are involved in market institutions. It is true of all human rights.

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'Modus Vivendi' (p.36)
Philosophical Maxims
Novalis
Novalis
4 months 1 week ago
The first Man is the first...

The first Man is the first Spirit-seer; all appears to him as Spirit. What are children, but first men? The fresh gaze of the Child is richer in significance than the forecasting of the most indubitable Seer.

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Philosophical Maxims
Isaac Asimov
Isaac Asimov
6 months 1 week ago
Earth is a ball that is...

Earth is a ball that is over 12,000 kilometres in diameter, and if it were modelled into an object the size of a billiard ball, with all its surface unevenness reproduced exactly to scale, the model would be smoother than an ordinary billiard ball and the ocean would be an all but unnoticeable mist of dampness over 70 percent of its surface.

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Philosophical Maxims
Charles Sanders Peirce
Charles Sanders Peirce
4 months 1 week ago
We are accustomed to speak of...

We are accustomed to speak of ideas as reproduced, as passed from mind to mind, as similar or dissimilar to one another, and, in short, as if they were substantial things; nor can any reasonable objection be raised to such expressions. But taking the word "idea" in the sense of an event in an individual consciousness, it is clear that an idea once past is gone forever, and any supposed recurrence of it is another idea. These two ideas are not present in the same state of consciousness, and therefore cannot possibly be compared.

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Philosophical Maxims
A. J. Ayer
A. J. Ayer
4 months 1 week ago
The problem of induction is, roughly...

The problem of induction is, roughly speaking, the problem of finding a way to prove that certain empirical generalizations which are derived from past experience will hold good also in the future. There are only two ways of approaching this problem on the assumption that it is a genuine problem, and it is easy to see that neither of them can lead to its solution.

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p. 49.
Philosophical Maxims
John Locke
John Locke
5 months 1 week ago
The native and untaught suggestions of...

The native and untaught suggestions of inquisitive children do often offer things, that may set a considering man's thoughts on work. And I think there is frequently more to be learn'd from the unexpected questions of a child than the discourses of men, who talk in a road, according to the notions they have borrowed, and the prejudices of their education.

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Sec. 121
Philosophical Maxims
Michel de Montaigne
Michel de Montaigne
5 months 2 weeks ago
He that I am reading seems...

He that I am reading seems always to have the most force.

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Book II, Ch. 12. Apology for Raimond Sebond
Philosophical Maxims
Seneca the Younger
Seneca the Younger
1 month 3 weeks ago
The shortest way…

The shortest way to wealth is through the contempt of wealth.

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Philosophical Maxims
Herbert Marcuse
Herbert Marcuse
4 months 3 days ago
The will is a unity of...

The will is a unity of two different aspects or moments: first, the individual's ability to abstract from every specific condition and, by negating it, to return to the absolute liberty of the pure ego; secondly, the individual's act of freely adopting a concrete condition, freely affirming his existence as a particular, limited ego.

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P. 185
Philosophical Maxims
Emil Cioran
Emil Cioran
4 months 1 week ago
For two thousand years, Jesus has...

For two thousand years, Jesus has revenged himself on us for not having died on a sofa.

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Philosophical Maxims
William James
William James
5 months 1 week ago
Let sanguine healthy-mindedness do its best...

Let sanguine healthy-mindedness do its best with its strange power of living in the moment and ignoring and forgetting, still the evil background is really there to be thought of, and the skull will grin in at the banquet.

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Lectures IV and V, "The Religion of Healthy-Mindedness"
Philosophical Maxims
Karl Mannheim
Karl Mannheim
1 month 1 week ago
Conflicting intellectual positions may actually come...

Conflicting intellectual positions may actually come to supplement one another. It is imperative in the present transitional period to make use of the intellectual twilight which dominates our epoch and in which all values and points of view appear in their genuine relativity. We must realize once and for all that the meanings which make up our world are simply an historically determined and continuously developing structure in which man develops, and are in no sense absolute.

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Philosophical Maxims
Francis Bacon
Francis Bacon
5 months 2 weeks ago
Death is a friend of ours;...

Death is a friend of ours; and he that is not ready to entertain him is not at home.

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An Essay on Death, published in The Remaines of the Right Honourable Francis Lord Verulam (1648), which may not have been written by Bacon
Philosophical Maxims
Theodor Adorno
Theodor Adorno
3 months 3 weeks ago
The important thing is not the...

The important thing is not the planning of an Index Verborum Prohibitorum of current noble nouns, but rather the examination of their linguistic function.

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p. 6
Philosophical Maxims
Iris Murdoch
Iris Murdoch
4 months 2 days ago
People from a planet without flowers...

People from a planet without flowers would think we must be mad with joy the whole time to have such things about us.

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A Fairly Honourable Defeat (1970); 2001, p. 170.
Philosophical Maxims

Das Lob Der Narrheit

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St. Augustine of Hippo
St. Augustine of Hippo
5 months 3 weeks ago
In order to understand the Scriptures,...

In order to understand the Scriptures, it is absolutely necessary to know the whole, complete Christ, that is, Head and members. For sometimes Christ speaks in the name of the Head alone, sometimes in the name of His body, which is the holy Church spread over the entire earth. And we are in His body, and we hear ourselves speaking in it, for the Apostle tells us: We are members of His body (Eph. 5:30). In many places does the Apostle tell us this.

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p. 419
Philosophical Maxims
comfortdragon
comfortdragon
3 months 3 days ago
If things are...
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Main Content / General
Emil Cioran
Emil Cioran
4 months 1 week ago
If you don't want to explode...

If you don't want to explode with rage, leave your memory alone, abstain from burrowing there.

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Philosophical Maxims
Emil Cioran
Emil Cioran
4 months 1 week ago
One of the biggest paradoxes of...

One of the biggest paradoxes of our world: memories vanish when we want to remember, but fix themselves permanently in the mind when we want to forget.

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Philosophical Maxims
William James
William James
5 months 1 week ago
Pacifists ought to enter more deeply...

Pacifists ought to enter more deeply into the aesthetical and ethical point of view of their opponents. ... So long as antimilitarists propose no substitute for war's disciplinary function, no moral equivalent of war, analogous, as one might say, to the mechanical equivalent of heat, so long they fail to realize the full inwardness of the situation. And as a rule they do fail. The duties, penalties, and sanctions pictured in the utopias they paint are all too weak and tame to touch the military-minded.

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Philosophical Maxims
C. S. Lewis
C. S. Lewis
5 months 1 week ago
'It comes, it comes!' they sang....

It comes, it comes!' they sang. 'Sleepers awake! It comes, it comes, it comes.' One dreadful glance over my shoulder I essayed - not long enough to see (or did I see?) the rim of the sunrise that shoots Time dead with golden arrows and puts to flight all phantasmal shapes. Screaming, I buried my face in the fold of the Teacher's robe. 'The morning! The morning!' I cried. 'I am caught by the morning and I am a ghost.'

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Ch. 14
Philosophical Maxims
Aldous Huxley
Aldous Huxley
5 months 1 week ago
Experience teaches only the teachable... Tragedy...

Experience teaches only the teachable...

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Tragedy and the Whole Truth
Philosophical Maxims
Bertrand Russell
Bertrand Russell
5 months 1 week ago
If everything must have a cause,...

If everything must have a cause, then God must have a cause. If there can be anything without a cause, it may just as well be the world as God, so that there cannot be any validity in that argument. It is exactly of the same nature as the Hindu's view, that the world rested upon an elephant and the elephant rested upon a tortoise; and when they said, "How about the tortoise?" the Indian said, "Suppose we change the subject." The argument is really no better than that.

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"The First-cause Argument"
Philosophical Maxims
José Ortega y Gasset
José Ortega y Gasset
4 months 1 day ago
Be it well understood, I am...

Be it well understood, I am free by compulsion, whether I wish to be or not. Freedom is not an activity pursued by an entity that, apart from and previous to such pursuit, is already possessed of a fixed being. To be free means to be lacking in constitutive identity, not to have subscribed to a determined being, to be able to be other than what one was, to be unable to install oneself once and for all in any given being. The only attribute of the fixed, stable being in the free being is this constitutive instability.

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"Man has no nature"
Philosophical Maxims
Aldous Huxley
Aldous Huxley
5 months 1 week ago
I was looking at my furniture,...

I was looking at my furniture, not as the utilitarian who has to sit on chairs, to write at desks and tables, and not as the cameraman or scientific recorder, but as the pure aesthete whose concern is only with forms and their relationships within the field of vision or the picture space. But as I looked, this purely aesthetic, Cubist's-eye view gave place to what I can only describe as the sacramental vision of reality. I was back where I had been when I was looking at the flowers-back in a world where everything shone with the Inner Light, and was infinite in its significance.

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describing his experiment with mescaline, p. 22
Philosophical Maxims

Lysis

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John Dewey
John Dewey
4 months 2 days ago
What happens in the movement of...

What happens in the movement of art is emergence of new materials of experience demanding expression, and therefore involving in their expression new forms and techniques.

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p. 148
Philosophical Maxims
Marshall McLuhan
Marshall McLuhan
3 months 1 week ago
Since Sputnik there is no Nature....

Since Sputnik there is no Nature. Nature is an item contained in a man-made environment of satellites and information.

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Philosophical Maxims
Jean Paul Sartre
Jean Paul Sartre
5 months 1 week ago
Politics is a science. You can...

Politics is a science. You can demonstrate that you are right and that others are wrong.

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Act 5, sc. 2
Philosophical Maxims
Ernest Renan
Ernest Renan
2 months 6 days ago
Colonization on a grand scale....

Colonization on a grand scale is a political necessity of absolutely the first order. A nation that does not colonize is irrevocably vowed to socialism, to war between rich and poor. The conquest of a nation of inferior race by a superior race, which establishes itself as the ruler, has nothing shocking about it.

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92-93
Philosophical Maxims
Denis Diderot
Denis Diderot
4 months 2 weeks ago
Evil always turns up in this...

Evil always turns up in this world through some genius or other.

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As quoted in Dictionary of Foreign Quotations (1980) by Mary Collison, Robert L. Collison, p. 98
Philosophical Maxims
Thomas Jefferson
Thomas Jefferson
1 month 1 week ago
I say, the earth belongs to...

I say, the earth belongs to each of these generations during its course, fully and in its own right. The second generation receives it clear of the debts and incumbrances of the first, the third of the second, and so on. For if the first could charge it with a debt, then the earth would belong to the dead and not to the living generation. Then, no generation can contract debts greater than may be paid during the course of its own existence.

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Letter to James Madison (6 September 1789) ME 7:455, Papers 15:393
Philosophical Maxims
Søren Kierkegaard
Søren Kierkegaard
6 months 1 week ago
It will be easy for us...

It will be easy for us once we receive the ball of yarn from Ariadne (love) and then go through all the mazes of the labyrinth (life) and kill the monster. But how many are there who plunge into life (the labyrinth) without taking that precaution?

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Philosophical Maxims
Jean Jacques Rousseau
Jean Jacques Rousseau
5 months 1 week ago
Complete ignorance with regard to certain...

Complete ignorance with regard to certain matters is perhaps the best thing for children; but let them learn very early what it is impossible to conceal from them permanently. Either their curiosity must never be aroused, or it must be satisfied before the age when it becomes a source of danger. Your conduct towards your pupil in this respect depends greatly on his individual circumstances, the society in which he moves, the position in which he may find himself, etc. Nothing must be left to chance; and if you are not sure of keeping him in ignorance of the difference between the sexes till he is sixteen, take care you teach him before he is ten.

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Philosophical Maxims
Simone Weil
Simone Weil
3 months 3 weeks ago
But if Germany, thanks to Hitler...

But if Germany, thanks to Hitler and his successors, were to enslave the European nations and destroy most of the treasures of their past, future historians would certainly pronounce that she had civilized Europe.

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p. 124
Philosophical Maxims
bell hooks
bell hooks
3 months 3 weeks ago
Indeed much of the literature written...

Indeed much of the literature written about black folks in the post-civil rights era emphasized the need for jobs. Material advancement was deemed the pressing agenda. Mental health concerns were not a high priority.

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Philosophical Maxims
Florence Nightingale
Florence Nightingale
3 months 3 weeks ago
Women dream till they have no...

Women dream till they have no longer the strength to dream; those dreams against which they so struggle, so honestly, vigorously, and conscientiously, and so in vain, yet which are their life, without which they could not have lived; those dreams go at last. All their plans and visions seem vanished, and they know not where; gone, and they cannot recall them. They do not even remember them. And they are left without the food of reality or of hope. Later in life, they neither desire nor dream, neither of activity, nor of love, nor of intellect. The last often survives the longest. They wish, if their experiences would benefit anybody, to give them to someone. But they never find an hour free in which to collect their thoughts, and so discouragement becomes ever deeper and deeper, and they less and less capable of undertaking anything.

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Philosophical Maxims
Denis Diderot
Denis Diderot
4 months 2 weeks ago
Gratitude is a burden....

Gratitude is a burden, and every burden is made to be shaken off.

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Philosophical Maxims
Emil Cioran
Emil Cioran
4 months 1 week ago
It is debasing to die the...

It is debasing to die the way one does; it is intolerable to be exposed to an end over which we have no control, an end which lies in wait for us, overthrows us, casts us into the unnameable.

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Philosophical Maxims
Novalis
Novalis
4 months 1 week ago
Blood will stream over Europe until...

Blood will stream over Europe until the nations become aware of the frightful madness which drives them in circles. And then, struck by celestial music and made gentle, they approach their former altars all together, hear about the works of peace, and hold a great celebration of peace with fervent tears before the smoking altars.

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As quoted in the Fourth Leaflet of the White Rose
Philosophical Maxims
Seneca the Younger
Seneca the Younger
1 month 3 weeks ago
It is quality….

It is quality rather than quantity that matters.

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Line 1
Philosophical Maxims
Arthur Schopenhauer
Arthur Schopenhauer
5 months 1 week ago
Childish and altogether ludicrous is what...

Childish and altogether ludicrous is what you yourself are and all philosophers; and if a grown-up man like me spends fifteen minutes with fools of this kind, it is merely a way of passing the time. I've now got more important things to do. Goodbye!

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Thrasymachus, in On the Indestructibility of our Essential Being by Death, in Essays and Aphorisms (1970) as translated by R. J. Hollingdale, p. 76
Philosophical Maxims
Emma Goldman
Emma Goldman
3 months 3 weeks ago
The STATE IDEA, the authoritarian principle,...

The STATE IDEA, the authoritarian principle, has been proven bankrupt by the experience of the Russian Revolution. If I were to sum up my whole argument in one sentence I should say: The inherent tendency of the State is to concentrate, to narrow, and monopolize all social activities; the nature of revolution is, on the contrary, to grow, to broaden, and disseminate itself in ever-wider circles. In other words, the State is institutional and static; revolution is fluent, dynamic. These two tendencies are incompatible and mutually destructive. The State idea killed the Russian Revolution and it must have the same result in all other revolutions, unless the libertarian idea prevail.

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Philosophical Maxims
Mary Wollstonecraft
Mary Wollstonecraft
4 months 1 week ago
Till society is very differently constituted,...

Till society is very differently constituted, parents, I fear, will still insist on being obeyed, because they will be obeyed, and constantly endeavour to settle that power on a Divine right, which will not bear the investigation of reason.

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Ch. 11
Philosophical Maxims
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