β
You have your way. I have my way. As for the right way, the correct way, and the only way, it does not exist.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche
β
One ought, every day at least, to hear a little song, read a good poem, see a fine picture, and, if it were possible, to speak a few reasonable words.
β
β
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship)
β
We should consider every day lost on which we have not danced at least once.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche
β
The mark of the immature man is that he wants to die nobly for a cause, while the mark of the mature man is that he wants to live humbly for one.
β
β
J.D. Salinger (The Catcher in the Rye)
β
Nothing great in the world was accomplished without passion.
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
β
There are two different types of people in the world, those who want to know, and those who want to believe.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche
β
Silence is worse; all truths that are kept silent become poisonous.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche (Thus Spoke Zarathustra)
β
I know of no better life purpose than to perish in attempting the great and the impossible.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche
β
A thought, even a possibility, can shatter and transform us.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche
β
Is it better to out-monster the monster or to be quietly devoured?
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche
β
Man is something that shall be overcome. Man is a rope, tied between beast and overman β a rope over an abyss. What is great in man is that he is a bridge and not an end.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche (Thus Spoke Zarathustra)
β
Hegel remarks somewhere that all great, world-historical facts and personages occur, as it were, twice. He has forgotten to add: the first time as tragedy, the second as farce.
β
β
Karl Marx (The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte)
β
There is an innocence in admiration: it occurs in one who has not yet realized that they might one day be admired.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche
β
The fundamental problem of political philosophy is still precisely the one that Spinoza saw so clearly (and that Wilhelm Reich rediscovered): Why do men fight for their servitude as stubbornly as though it were their salvation?
β
β
Gilles Deleuze (Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia)
β
The mark of the immature man is that he wants to die nobly for a cause, while the mark of the mature man is that is wants to live humbly for one.
β
β
Wilhelm Stekel
β
Genuine tragedies in the world are not conflicts between right and wrong. They are conflicts between two rights
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
β
A thought comes when it will, not when I will.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche
β
The life of the enemy . Whoever lives for the sake of combating an enemy has an interest in the enemy's staying alive.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche
β
It is nobler to declare oneself wrong than to insist on being right --especially when one is right.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche
β
The opposite of love is not hate. It is indifference.
β
β
Wilhelm Stekel (The Beloved Ego: Foundations of the New Study of the Psyche)
β
What experience and history teaches us is that people and governments have never learned anything from history, or acted on principles deduced from it.
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
β
Truth is found neither in the thesis nor the antithesis, but in an emergent synthesis which reconciles the two.
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
β
Only the liberation of the natural capacity for love in human beings can master their sadistic destructiveness.
β
β
Wilhelm Reich
β
Only one man ever understood me, and he didn't understand me.
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
β
Family love is messy, clinging, and of an annoying and repetitive pattern, like bad wallpaper.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche
β
Education is the art of making man ethical
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
β
Cynicism is the only form in which base souls approach honesty.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche
β
Mirror, mirror, here I stand. Who is the fairest in the land?
β
β
Wilhelm Grimm (Grimm'S Fairy Tales)
β
In music the passions enjoy themselves.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche (Beyond Good and Evil)
β
The Wilhelm Gustloff was pregnant with lost souls conceived of war. They would crowd into her belly and she would give birth to their freedom.
β
β
Ruta Sepetys (Salt to the Sea)
β
The valor that struggles is better than the weakness that endures.
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
β
Man's right to know, to learn, to inquire, to make bona fide errors, to investigate human emotions must, by all means, be safe, if the word "freedom" should ever be more than an empty political slogan.
β
β
Wilhelm Reich
β
I tell you: one must still have chaos in one, to give birth to a dancing star. I tell you: you have still chaos in you.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche (Thus Spoke Zarathustra)
β
The pleasure of living and the pleasure of the orgasm are identical. Extreme orgasm anxiety forms the basis of the general fear of life.
β
β
Wilhelm Reich
β
I am too inquisitive, too skeptical, too arrogant, to let myself be satisfied with an obvious and crass solution of things. God is such an obvious and crass solution; a solution which is a sheer indelicacy to us thinkers - at bottom He is really nothing but a coarse commandment against us: ye shall not think!
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche
β
We shall be free, just as our fathers were.
β
β
Friedrich Schiller (Wilhelm Tell)
β
Success has always been a great liar
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche
β
This is the best of all possible worlds.
β
β
Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz
β
The owl of Minerva begins its flight only with the coming of the dusk.
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (Elements of the Philosophy of Right)
β
It is solely by risking life that freedom is obtained; . . . the individual who has not staked his or her life may, no doubt, be recognized as a Person; but he or she has not attained the truth of this recognition as an independent self-consciousness.
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (Phenomenology of Spirit)
β
To live alone one must be either a beast or a god, says Aristotle. Leaving out the third case: one must be both - a philosopher.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche
β
Too fair to worship, too divine to love.
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
β
When liberty is mentioned, we must always be careful to observe whether it is not really the assertion of private interests which is thereby designated.
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
β
The fact that political ideologies are tangible realities is not a proof of their vitally necessary character. The bubonic plague was an extraordinarily powerful social reality, but no one would have regarded it as vitally necessary.
β
β
Wilhelm Reich
β
People who are too fastidious towards the finite never reach actuality, but linger in abstraction, and their light dies away.
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
β
Love is the absence of Anxiety.
β
β
Wilhelm Reich
β
no one talks more passionately about his rights than he who in the depths of his soul doubts whether he has any
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche
β
He who hasn't tasted bitter things hasn't earned sweet things.
β
β
Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz (Discourse on Metaphysics and Other Essays)
β
Once the state has been founded, there can no longer be any heroes. They come on the scene only in uncivilized conditions.
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
β
I know that what you call 'God' really exists, but not in the form you think; God is primal cosmic energy, the love in your body, your integrity, and your perception of the nature in you and outside of you.
β
β
Wilhelm Reich (Listen, Little Man!)
β
Even the most beautiful scenery is no longer assured of our love after we have lived in it for three months, and some distant coast attracts our avarice: possessions are generally diminished by possession.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche
β
Nihil est sine ratione.
[There is nothing without a reason.]
β
β
Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz
β
Reading list (1972 edition)[edit]
1. Homer β Iliad, Odyssey
2. The Old Testament
3. Aeschylus β Tragedies
4. Sophocles β Tragedies
5. Herodotus β Histories
6. Euripides β Tragedies
7. Thucydides β History of the Peloponnesian War
8. Hippocrates β Medical Writings
9. Aristophanes β Comedies
10. Plato β Dialogues
11. Aristotle β Works
12. Epicurus β Letter to Herodotus; Letter to Menoecus
13. Euclid β Elements
14. Archimedes β Works
15. Apollonius of Perga β Conic Sections
16. Cicero β Works
17. Lucretius β On the Nature of Things
18. Virgil β Works
19. Horace β Works
20. Livy β History of Rome
21. Ovid β Works
22. Plutarch β Parallel Lives; Moralia
23. Tacitus β Histories; Annals; Agricola Germania
24. Nicomachus of Gerasa β Introduction to Arithmetic
25. Epictetus β Discourses; Encheiridion
26. Ptolemy β Almagest
27. Lucian β Works
28. Marcus Aurelius β Meditations
29. Galen β On the Natural Faculties
30. The New Testament
31. Plotinus β The Enneads
32. St. Augustine β On the Teacher; Confessions; City of God; On Christian Doctrine
33. The Song of Roland
34. The Nibelungenlied
35. The Saga of Burnt NjΓ‘l
36. St. Thomas Aquinas β Summa Theologica
37. Dante Alighieri β The Divine Comedy;The New Life; On Monarchy
38. Geoffrey Chaucer β Troilus and Criseyde; The Canterbury Tales
39. Leonardo da Vinci β Notebooks
40. NiccolΓ² Machiavelli β The Prince; Discourses on the First Ten Books of Livy
41. Desiderius Erasmus β The Praise of Folly
42. Nicolaus Copernicus β On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres
43. Thomas More β Utopia
44. Martin Luther β Table Talk; Three Treatises
45. FranΓ§ois Rabelais β Gargantua and Pantagruel
46. John Calvin β Institutes of the Christian Religion
47. Michel de Montaigne β Essays
48. William Gilbert β On the Loadstone and Magnetic Bodies
49. Miguel de Cervantes β Don Quixote
50. Edmund Spenser β Prothalamion; The Faerie Queene
51. Francis Bacon β Essays; Advancement of Learning; Novum Organum, New Atlantis
52. William Shakespeare β Poetry and Plays
53. Galileo Galilei β Starry Messenger; Dialogues Concerning Two New Sciences
54. Johannes Kepler β Epitome of Copernican Astronomy; Concerning the Harmonies of the World
55. William Harvey β On the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals; On the Circulation of the Blood; On the Generation of Animals
56. Thomas Hobbes β Leviathan
57. RenΓ© Descartes β Rules for the Direction of the Mind; Discourse on the Method; Geometry; Meditations on First Philosophy
58. John Milton β Works
59. MoliΓ¨re β Comedies
60. Blaise Pascal β The Provincial Letters; Pensees; Scientific Treatises
61. Christiaan Huygens β Treatise on Light
62. Benedict de Spinoza β Ethics
63. John Locke β Letter Concerning Toleration; Of Civil Government; Essay Concerning Human Understanding;Thoughts Concerning Education
64. Jean Baptiste Racine β Tragedies
65. Isaac Newton β Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy; Optics
66. Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz β Discourse on Metaphysics; New Essays Concerning Human Understanding;Monadology
67. Daniel Defoe β Robinson Crusoe
68. Jonathan Swift β A Tale of a Tub; Journal to Stella; Gulliver's Travels; A Modest Proposal
69. William Congreve β The Way of the World
70. George Berkeley β Principles of Human Knowledge
71. Alexander Pope β Essay on Criticism; Rape of the Lock; Essay on Man
72. Charles de Secondat, baron de Montesquieu β Persian Letters; Spirit of Laws
73. Voltaire β Letters on the English; Candide; Philosophical Dictionary
74. Henry Fielding β Joseph Andrews; Tom Jones
75. Samuel Johnson β The Vanity of Human Wishes; Dictionary; Rasselas; The Lives of the Poets
β
β
Mortimer J. Adler (How to Read a Book: The Classic Guide to Intelligent Reading)
β
Character is determined more by the lack of certain experiences than by those one has had.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche
β
My formula for happiness: a Yes, a No, a straight line, a goal.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche
β
Music is the hidden arithmetical exercise of a mind unconscious that it is calculating.
β
β
Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz
β
History is not the soil in which happiness grows. The periods of happiness in it are the blank pages of history.
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (The Philosophy of History)
β
An idea is always a generalization, and generalization is a property of thinking. To generalize means to think
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
β
You differ from a great man in only one respect: the great man was once a very little man, but he developed one important quality: he recognized the smallness and narrowness of his thoughts and actions. Under the pressure of some task that meant a great deal to him, he learned to see how his smallness, his pettiness endangered his happiness. In other words, a great man knows when and in what way he is a little man. A little man does not know he is little and is afraid to know. He hides his pettiness and narrowness behind illusions of strength and greatness, someone else's strength and greatness. He's proud of his great generals but not of himself. He admires an idea he has not had, not one he has had. The less he understands something, the more firmly he believes in it. And the better he understands an idea, the less he believes in it.
β
β
Wilhelm Reich (Listen, Little Man!)
β
You'll have a good, secure life when being alive means more to you than security, love more than money, your freedom more than public or partisan opinion, when the mood of Beethoven's or Bach's music becomes the mood of your whole life β¦ when your thinking is in harmony, and no longer in conflict, with your feelings β¦ when you let yourself be guided by the thoughts of great sages and no longer by the crimes of great warriors β¦ when you pay the men and women who teach your children better than the politicians; when truths inspire you and empty formulas repel you; when you communicate with your fellow workers in foreign countries directly, and no longer through diplomats...
β
β
Wilhelm Reich (Listen, Little Man!)
β
He who helped you when you were in trouble ought not afterwards be despised by you
β
β
Wilhelm Grimm (Grimm'S Fairy Tales)
β
America is therefore the land of the future, where, in the ages that lie before us, the burden of the World's History shall reveal itself.
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
β
Because you have no memory for things that happened ten or twenty years ago, you're still mouthing the same nonsense as two thousand years ago. Worse, you cling with might and main to such absurdities as 'race,' 'class,' 'nation,' and the obligation to observe a religion and repress your love.
β
β
Wilhelm Reich (Listen, Little Man!)
β
We may affirm absolutely that nothing great in the world has been accomplished without passion.
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
β
Why is there something rather than nothing?
β
β
Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz
β
I wish the stage were as narrow as the wire of a tighrope dancer so that no incompetent would dare step upon it.
β
β
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship)
β
Art does not simply reveal God: it is one of the ways in which God reveals, and thus actualizes, himself.
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (Introductory Lectures on Aesthetics)
β
To achieve great things we must be self-confined...mastery is revealed in limitation.
β
β
Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling
β
And the truth must finally lie in that which every oppressed individual feels within himself but hasn't the courage to express
β
β
Wilhelm Reich (Beyond Psychology: Letters and Journals 1934-1939)
β
I am more and more convinced that our happiness or unhappiness depends far more on the way we meet the events of life, than on the nature of those events themselves.
β
β
Wilhelm von Humboldt
β
We would not let ourselves be burned to death for our opinions: we are not sure enough of them for that.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche
β
Mistaking insolence for freedom has always been the hallmark of the slave.
β
β
Wilhelm Reich (Listen, Little Man!)
β
He who is too well off is always longing for something new.
β
β
Jacob Grimm (The Fairy Tales of the Brothers Grimm)
β
There is nothing in the understanding which has not come from the senses, except the understanding itself, or the one who understands.
β
β
Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz (Philosophical Essays)
β
Creatingβthat is the great salvation from suffering, and life's alleviation. But for the creator to appear, suffering itself is needed, and much transformation.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche (Thus Spoke Zarathustra)
β
Turn back, turn back,thou pretty bride,
Within this house thou must not abide.
For here do evil things betide.
β
β
Jacob Grimm (Cinderella and Other Tales by the Brothers Grimm Book and Charm)
β
The state of man's mind, or the elementary phase of mind which he so far possesses, conforms precisely to the state of the world as he so far views it
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
β
World history is a court of judgment
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
β
I go into solitude so as not to drink out of everybody's cistern. When I am among the many I live as the many do, and I do not think I really think. After a time it always seems as if they want to banish my self from myself and rob me of my soul.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche
β
It is a terrible thought, to contemplate that an immense number of mediocre thinkers are occupied with really influential matters.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche
β
Nothing is in the intellect that was not first in the senses, except the intellect itself.
β
β
Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz
β
β¦every feeling is the perception of a truth...
β
β
Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz (New Essays on Human Understanding)
β
Consider the cattle, grazing as they pass you by. They do not know what is meant by yesterday or today, they leap about, eat, rest, digest, leap about again, and so from morn till night and from day to day, fettered to the moment and its pleasure or displeasure, and thus neither melancholy nor bored. [...] A human being may well ask an animal: 'Why do you not speak to me of your happiness but only stand and gaze at me?' The animal would like to answer, and say, 'The reason is I always forget what I was going to say' - but then he forgot this answer too, and stayed silent.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche (Untimely Meditations)
β
The bud disappears when the blossom breaks through, and we might say that the former is refuted by the latter; in the same way when the fruit comes, the blossom may be explained to be a false form of the plantβs existence, for the fruit appears as its true nature in place of the blossom. The ceaseless activity of their own inherent nature makes these stages moments of an organic unity, where they not merely do not contradict one another, but where one is as necessary as the other; and constitutes thereby the life of the whole.
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (Phenomenology of Spirit)
β
The ignorant man is not free, because what confronts him is an alien world, something outside him and in the offing, on which he depends, without his having made this foreign world for himself and therefore without being at home in it by himself as in something his own. The impulse of curiosity, the pressure for knowledge, from the lowest level up to the highest rung of philosophical insight arises only from the struggle to cancel this situation of unfreedom and to make the world one's own in one's ideas and thought.
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
β
this is love. I have my self-consciousness not in myself but in the other. I am satisfied and have peace with myself only in this other and I AM only because I have peace with myself; if I did not have it then I would be a contradiction that falls to pieces. This other, because it likewise exists outside itself, has its self-consciousness only in me; and both the other and I are only this consciousness of being-outside-ourselves and of our identity; we are only this intuition, feeling, and knowledge of our unity. This is love, and without knowing that love is both a distinguishing and the sublation of this distinction, one speaks emptily of it.
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
β
You don't believe that your friend could ever do anything great. You despise yourself in secret, even β no, especially β when you stand on your dignity; and since you despise yourself, you are unable to respect your friend. You can't bring yourself to believe that anyone you have sat at table with, or shared a house with, is capable of great achievement. That is why all great men have been solitary. It is hard to think in your company, little man. One can only think 'about' you, or 'for your benefit', not 'with' you, for you stifle all big, generous ideas.
β
β
Wilhelm Reich (Listen, Little Man!)
β
You think the end justifies the means, however vile. I tell you: the end is the means by which you achieve it. Today's step is tomorrow's life. Great ends cannot be attained by base means. You've proved that in all your social upheavals. The meanness and inhumanity of the means make you mean and inhuman and make the end unattainable.
β
β
Wilhelm Reich (Listen, Little Man!)
β
Remain faithful to the earth, my brothers, with the power of your virtue. Let your gift-giving love and your knowledge serve the meaning of the earth. Thus I beg and beseech you. Do not let them fly away from earthly things and beat with their wings against eternal walls. Alas, there has always been so much virtue that has flown away. Lead back to the earth the virtue that flew away, as I doβback to the body, back to life, that it may give the earth a meaning, a human meaning.
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche
β
If we go on to cast a look at the fate of world historical personalities... we shall find it to have been no happy one. They attained no calm enjoyment; their whole life was labor and trouble; their whole nature was nothing but their master passion. When their object is attained they fall off like empty hulls from the kernel. They die early, like Alexander; they are murdered, like Casear; transported to St. Helena, like Napoleon.
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (The Philosophy of History)
β
If we are in a general way permitted to regard human activity in the realm of the beautiful as a liberation of the soul, as a release from constraint and restriction, in short to consider that art does actually alleviate the most overpowering and tragic catastrophes by means of the creations it offers to our contemplation and enjoyment, it is the art of music which conducts us to the final summit of that ascent to freedom.
β
β
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (On the Arts: Selections from G.W.F. Hegel's Aesthetics or the Philosophy of Fine Art)
β
We laugh at a man who, stepping out of his room at the very minute when the sun is rising, says, βIt is my will that the sun shall riseβ; or at him who, unable to stop a wheel, says, βI wish it to rollβ; or, again, at him who, thrown in a wrestling match, says, βHere I lie, but here I wish to lie.β But, joking apart, do we not act like one of these three persons whenever we use the expression βI wishβ?
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche (Daybreak: Thoughts on the Prejudices of Morality)
β
76. David Hume β Treatise on Human Nature; Essays Moral and Political; An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding
77. Jean-Jacques Rousseau β On the Origin of Inequality; On the Political Economy; Emile β or, On Education, The Social Contract
78. Laurence Sterne β Tristram Shandy; A Sentimental Journey through France and Italy
79. Adam Smith β The Theory of Moral Sentiments; The Wealth of Nations
80. Immanuel Kant β Critique of Pure Reason; Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysics of Morals; Critique of Practical Reason; The Science of Right; Critique of Judgment; Perpetual Peace
81. Edward Gibbon β The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire; Autobiography
82. James Boswell β Journal; Life of Samuel Johnson, Ll.D.
83. Antoine Laurent Lavoisier β TraitΓ© ΓlΓ©mentaire de Chimie (Elements of Chemistry)
84. Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, and James Madison β Federalist Papers
85. Jeremy Bentham β Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation; Theory of Fictions
86. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe β Faust; Poetry and Truth
87. Jean Baptiste Joseph Fourier β Analytical Theory of Heat
88. Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel β Phenomenology of Spirit; Philosophy of Right; Lectures on the Philosophy of History
89. William Wordsworth β Poems
90. Samuel Taylor Coleridge β Poems; Biographia Literaria
91. Jane Austen β Pride and Prejudice; Emma
92. Carl von Clausewitz β On War
93. Stendhal β The Red and the Black; The Charterhouse of Parma; On Love
94. Lord Byron β Don Juan
95. Arthur Schopenhauer β Studies in Pessimism
96. Michael Faraday β Chemical History of a Candle; Experimental Researches in Electricity
97. Charles Lyell β Principles of Geology
98. Auguste Comte β The Positive Philosophy
99. HonorΓ© de Balzac β PΓ¨re Goriot; Eugenie Grandet
100. Ralph Waldo Emerson β Representative Men; Essays; Journal
101. Nathaniel Hawthorne β The Scarlet Letter
102. Alexis de Tocqueville β Democracy in America
103. John Stuart Mill β A System of Logic; On Liberty; Representative Government; Utilitarianism; The Subjection of Women; Autobiography
104. Charles Darwin β The Origin of Species; The Descent of Man; Autobiography
105. Charles Dickens β Pickwick Papers; David Copperfield; Hard Times
106. Claude Bernard β Introduction to the Study of Experimental Medicine
107. Henry David Thoreau β Civil Disobedience; Walden
108. Karl Marx β Capital; Communist Manifesto
109. George Eliot β Adam Bede; Middlemarch
110. Herman Melville β Moby-Dick; Billy Budd
111. Fyodor Dostoevsky β Crime and Punishment; The Idiot; The Brothers Karamazov
112. Gustave Flaubert β Madame Bovary; Three Stories
113. Henrik Ibsen β Plays
114. Leo Tolstoy β War and Peace; Anna Karenina; What is Art?; Twenty-Three Tales
115. Mark Twain β The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn; The Mysterious Stranger
116. William James β The Principles of Psychology; The Varieties of Religious Experience; Pragmatism; Essays in Radical Empiricism
117. Henry James β The American; The Ambassadors
118. Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche β Thus Spoke Zarathustra; Beyond Good and Evil; The Genealogy of Morals;The Will to Power
119. Jules Henri PoincarΓ© β Science and Hypothesis; Science and Method
120. Sigmund Freud β The Interpretation of Dreams; Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis; Civilization and Its Discontents; New Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis
121. George Bernard Shaw β Plays and Prefaces
β
β
Mortimer J. Adler (How to Read a Book: The Classic Guide to Intelligent Reading)
β
I want you to stop being subhuman and become 'yourself'. 'Yourself,' I say. Not the newspaper you read, not your vicious neighbor's opinion, but 'yourself.' I know, and you don't, what you really are deep down. Deep down, you are what a deer, your God, your poet, or your philosopher is. But you think you're a member of the VFW, your bowling club, or the Ku Klux Klan, and because you think so, you behave as you do. This too was told you long ago, by Heinrich Mann in Germany, by Upton Sinclair and John Dos Passos in the United States. But you recognized neither Mann nor Sinclair. You recognize only the heavyweight champion and Al Capone. If given your choice between a library and a fight, you'll undoubtedly go to the fight.
β
β
Wilhelm Reich (Listen, Little Man!)
β
Suppose a human being has thus put his ear, as it were, to the heart chamber of the world will and felt the roaring desire for existence pouring from there into all the veins of the world, as a thundering current or as the gentlest brook, dissolving into a mistβhow could he fail to break suddenly? How could he endure to perceive the echo of innumerable shouts of pleasure and woe in the "wide space of the world night," enclosed in the wretched glass capsule of the human individual, without inexorably fleeing toward his primordial home, as he hears this shepherd's dance of metaphysics? But if such a work could nevertheless be perceived as a whole, without denial of individual existence; if such a creation could be created without smashing its creatorβwhence do we take the solution of such a contradiction?
β
β
Friedrich Nietzsche (The Birth of Tragedy)
β
What does it mean to be truly educated?
I think I can do no better about answering the question of what it means to be truly educated than to go back to some of the classic views on the subject. For example the views expressed by the founder of the modern higher education system, Wilhelm von Humboldt, leading humanist, a figure of the enlightenment who wrote extensively on education and human development and argued, I think, kind of very plausibly, that the core principle and requirement of a fulfilled human being is the ability to inquire and create constructively independently without external controls.
To move to a modern counterpart, a leading physicist who talked right here [at MIT], used to tell his classes it's not important what we cover in the class, it's important what you discover.
To be truly educated from this point of view means to be in a position to inquire and to create on the basis of the resources available to you which you've come to appreciate and comprehend. To know where to look, to know how to formulate serious questions, to question a standard doctrine if that's appropriate, to find your own way, to shape the questions that are worth pursuing, and to develop the path to pursue them. That means knowing, understanding many things but also, much more important than what you have stored in your mind, to know where to look, how to look, how to question, how to challenge, how to proceed independently, to deal with the challenges that the world presents to you and that you develop in the course of your self education and inquiry and investigations, in cooperation and solidarity with others.
That's what an educational system should cultivate from kindergarten to graduate school, and in the best cases sometimes does, and that leads to people who are, at least by my standards, well educated.ο»Ώ
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Noam Chomsky
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It is the fate of great achievements, born from a way of life that sets truth before security, to be gobbled up by you and excreted in the form of shit. For centuries great, brave, lonely men have been telling you what to do. Time and again you have corrupted, diminished and demolished their teachings; time and again you have been captivated by their weakest points, taken not the great truth, but some trifling error as your guiding principal. This, little man, is what you have done with Christianity, with the doctrine of sovereign people, with socialism, with everything you touch. Why, you ask, do you do this? I don't believe you really want an answer. When you hear the truth you'll cry bloody murder, or commit it. β¦ You had your choice between soaring to superhuman heights with Nietzsche and sinking into subhuman depths with Hitler. You shouted Heil! Heil! and chose the subhuman. You had the choice between Lenin's truly democratic constitution and Stalin's dictatorship. You chose Stalin's dictatorship. You had your choice between Freud's elucidation of the sexual core of your psychic disorders and his theory of cultural adaptation. You dropped the theory of sexuality and chose his theory of cultural adaptation, which left you hanging in mid-air. You had your choice between Jesus and his majestic simplicity and Paul with his celibacy for priests and life-long compulsory marriage for yourself. You chose the celibacy and compulsory marriage and forgot the simplicity of Jesus' mother, who bore her child for love and love alone. You had your choice between Marx's insight into the productivity of your living labor power, which alone creates the value of commodities and the idea of the state. You forgot the living energy of your labor and chose the idea of the state. In the French Revolution, you had your choice between the cruel Robespierre and the great Danton. You chose cruelty and sent greatness and goodness to the guillotine. In Germany you had your choice between Goring and Himmler on the one hand and Liebknecht, Landau, and Muhsam on the other. You made Himmler your police chief and murdered your great friends. You had your choice between Julius Streicher and Walter Rathenau. You murdered Rathenau. You had your choice between Lodge and Wilson. You murdered Wilson. You had your choice between the cruel Inquisition and Galileo's truth. You tortured and humiliated the great Galileo, from whose inventions you are still benefiting, and now, in the twentieth century, you have brought the methods of the Inquisition to a new flowering. β¦ Every one of your acts of smallness and meanness throws light on the boundless wretchedness of the human animal. 'Why so tragic?' you ask. 'Do you feel responsible for all evil?' With remarks like that you condemn yourself. If, little man among millions, you were to shoulder the barest fraction of your responsibility, the world would be a very different place. Your great friends wouldn't perish, struck down by your smallness.
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Wilhelm Reich (Listen, Little Man!)
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β¦man never regards what he possesses as so much his own, as what he does; and the labourer who tends a garden is perhaps in a truer sense its owner, than the listless voluptuary who enjoys its fruitsβ¦In view of this consideration, it seems as if all peasants and craftsman might be elevated into artists; that is, men who love their labour for its own sake, improve it by their own plastic genius and inventive skill, and thereby cultivate their intellect, ennoble their character, and exalt and refine their pleasures. And so humanity would be ennobled by the very things which now, though beautiful in themselves, so often serve to degrade itβ¦But, still, freedom is undoubtedly the indispensable condition, without which even the pursuits most congenial to individual human nature, can never succeed in producing such salutary influences. Whatever does not spring from a manβs free choice, or is only the result of instruction and guidance, does not enter into his very being, but remains alien to his true nature; he does not perform it with truly human energies, but merely with mechanical exactnessβ¦
β¦we may admire what he does, but we despise what he is.
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Wilhelm von Humboldt
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The cases described in this section (The Fear of Being) may seem extreme, but I have become convinced that they are not as uncommon as one would think. Beneath the seemingly rational exterior of our lives is a fear of insanity. We dare not question the values by which we live or rebel against the roles we play for fear of putting our sanity into doubt. We are like the inmates of a mental institution who must accept its inhumanity and insensitivity as caring and knowledgeableness if they hope to be regarded as sane enough to leave. The question who is sane and who is crazy was the theme of the novel One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest. The question, what is sanity? was clearly asked in the play Equus.
The idea that much of what we do is insane and that if we want to be sane, we must let ourselves go crazy has been strongly advanced by R.D. Laing. In the preface to the Pelican edition of his book The Divided Self, Laing writes: "In the context of our present pervasive madness that we call normality, sanity, freedom, all of our frames of reference are ambiguous and equivocal." And in the same preface: "Thus I would wish to emphasize that our 'normal' 'adjusted' state is too often the abdication of ecstasy, the betrayal of our true potentialities; that many of us are only too successful in acquiring a false self to adapt to false realities."
Wilhelm Reich had a somewhat similar view of present-day human behavior. Thus Reich says, "Homo normalis blocks off entirely the perception of basic orgonotic functioning by means of rigid armoring; in the schizophrenic, on the other hand, the armoring practically breaks down and thus the biosystem is flooded with deep experiences from the biophysical core with which it cannot cope." The "deep experiences" to which Reich refers are the pleasurable streaming sensations associated with intense excitation that is mainly sexual in nature. The schizophrenic cannot cope with these sensations because his body is too contracted to tolerate the charge. Unable to "block" the excitation or reduce it as a neurotic can, and unable to "stand" the charge, the schizophrenic is literally "driven crazy."
But the neurotic does not escape so easily either. He avoids insanity by blocking the excitation, that is, by reducing it to a point where there is no danger of explosion, or bursting. In effect the neurotic undergoes a psychological castration. However, the potential for explosive release is still present in his body, although it is rigidly guarded as if it were a bomb. The neurotic is on guard against himself, terrified to let go of his defenses and allow his feelings free expression. Having become, as Reich calls him, "homo normalis," having bartered his freedom and ecstasy for the security of being "well adjusted," he sees the alternative as "crazy." And in a sense he is right. Without going "crazy," without becoming "mad," so mad that he could kill, it is impossible to give up the defenses that protect him in the same way that a mental institution protects its inmates from self-destruction and the destruction of others.
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Alexander Lowen (Fear Of Life)
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Build your house on granite. By granite I mean your nature that you are torturing to death, the love in your child's body, your wife's dream of love, your own dream of life when you were sixteen. Exchange your illusions for a bit of truth. Throw out your politicians and diplomats! Take your destiny into your own hands and build your life on rock. Forget about your neighbor and look inside yourself! Your neighbor, too, will be grateful. Tell you're fellow workers all over the world that you're no longer willing to work for death but only for life. Instead of flocking to executions and shouting hurrah, hurrah, make a law for the protection of human life and its blessings. Such a law will be part of the granite foundation your house rests on. Protect your small children's love against the assaults of lascivious, frustrated men and women. Stop the mouth of the malignant old maid; expose her publicly or send her to a reform school instead of young people who are longing for love. Don;t try to outdo your exploiter in exploitation if you have a chance to become a boss. Throw away your swallowtails and top hat, and stop applying for a license to embrace your woman. Join forces with your kind in all countries; they are like you, for better or worse. Let your child grow up as nature (or 'God') intended. Don't try to improve on nature. Learn to understand it and protect it. Go to the library instead of the prize fight, go to foreign countries rather than to Coney Island. And first and foremost, think straight, trust the quiet inner voice inside you that tells you what to do. You hold your life in your hands, don't entrust it to anyone else, least of all to your chosen leaders. BE YOURSELF! Any number of great men have told you that.
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Wilhelm Reich (Listen, Little Man!)