“The philosopher seeks to hear within himself the echoes of the world symphony and to re-project them in the form of concepts. While he is contemplative-perceptive like the artist, compassionate like the religious, a seeker of purposes and causalities like the scientist, even while he feels himself swelling into a macrocosm, he all the while retains a certain self-possession, a way of viewing himself coldly as a mirror of the world.
This is the same sense of self-possession which characterizes the dramatic artist who transforms himself into alien bodies and talks with their alien tongues and yet can project this transformation into written verse that exists in the outside world on its own. What verse is for the poet, dialectical thinking is for the philosopher. He grasps for it in order to get hold of his own enchantment, in order to perpetuate it.”
―
Philosophy in the Tragic Age of the Greeks
Share this quote:
Friends Who Liked This Quote
To see what your friends thought of this quote, please sign up!
3 likes
All Members Who Liked This Quote
This Quote Is From
Philosophy in the Tragic Age of the Greeks
by
Friedrich Nietzsche1,310 ratings, average rating, 119 reviews
Open Preview
Browse By Tag
- love (101597)
- life (79558)
- inspirational (75997)
- humor (44417)
- philosophy (31076)
- inspirational-quotes (28955)
- god (26947)
- truth (24781)
- wisdom (24700)
- romance (24400)
- poetry (23351)
- life-lessons (22653)
- quotes (21170)
- death (20583)
- happiness (19056)
- travel (18874)
- hope (18580)
- faith (18452)
- inspiration (17333)
- spirituality (15760)
- relationships (15680)
- life-quotes (15611)
- religion (15410)
- love-quotes (15387)
- motivational (15343)
- writing (14957)
- success (14199)
- motivation (13199)
- time (12889)
- motivational-quotes (12601)


