I really like Simone Weil and she is definitely underrated. The book is a collection of notes from one a group of her lectures as taken by one of her students. So it’s not Simone writing herself but the essence of her thoughts and I can sense that the gist of her thoughts are captured and it does sound like Simone speaking through these words knowing what little I know about her. It’s essentially her opinion on various philosophical points such as materialism, the mind, politics and social history, ethics and aesthetics and various other miscellaneous topics which she also dabbles on. Its hard to pin point what it is that I like about her but she does certainly have a way which cuts, painlessly, if that isn’t an oxymoron, to the heart of the matter unlike many philosophers that I have read. Some of the best bits from the book were:
• “We can thanks to language call to mind anything we please; it is language which changes us into people who act. We are of course subject to what exists but we have power over almost everything through words. I have no power whatsoever over the sun and stars; but I have complete control over the word ‘sun’.”
• “Once Goethe had expressed his despair in Werther it became a phase through which all people pass.”
• “This is what the seventeenth century French general Turenne (of whom Napoleon said that he was the best genera before him) used to say to himself during battle when he could not stop himself shivering. The full reported sentence is: “you shiver carcass, but If you knew where I intend to take you next you would shiver even more.”
• “Judgement is the essential faculty of the mind. It is high praise to say of someone “he is a man of judgement”. Kant called this faculty of making relationships the original synthetic unity of apperception.”
• "One has to point out that there have been societies where oppression has been very much less, where there were neither oppressors not oppressed, that is to say, where there were no classes. These are the societies called 'primitive'. For a long time it used to be thought that there were very powerful chiefs in these societies, but modern historical science has shown that the chief did not have any real authority. There were assemblies (for example, assemblies of 'Elders'), councils which arrived at decisions unanimously, not by a majority decision. We might think this extraordinary, but, in fact, when one considers that these men, who had no division of labour, had the same desires, the same life, etc. unanimity is something quite natural."
• “One can submit to but one cannot accept the way production is no organised. If one stops oneself from thinking of all this, one makes oneself an accomplice in what is happening. One has to do something quite different: take one’s place in this system of things and do something about it.”
• “act as if the maxim of your act were to become through your action a universal law” – this is quite similar to a quote I remember reading a long time where and I know not from which book which said that you should act as though if they were to ask you to repeat your day you could honestly say that its entirety were filled with activities you would be happy to repeat for a lifetime.
• “Rule about suffering: “the cucumber is bitter, throw it away: there are brambles in your way, avoid them that is enough” – maybe Neechy would suggest the opposite.
• The greatest and perhaps the only danger for the young who have been richly blessed with intelligence is public opinion (sophistry on a special scale). Nowadays the mean that exist of making an impression on society on a grand scale are particularly powerful. if one doesn’t put questions to oneself and treat things critically, then that is because one has become corrupted by this sophistry which surrounds one on all sides.”