Abhijeet > Abhijeet's Quotes

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  • #1
    Charles Bukowski
    “the free soul is rare, but you know it when you see it - basically because you feel good, very good, when you are near or with them.”
    Charles Bukowski, Tales of Ordinary Madness

  • #2
    Charles Bukowski
    “People with no morals often considered themselves more free, but mostly they lacked the ability to feel or love.”
    Charles Bukowski, Women

  • #3
    Coleman Barks
    “Beyond our ideas of right-doing and wrong-doing,
    there is a field. I’ll meet you there.
    When the soul lies down in that grass,
    the world is too full to talk about.
    Ideas, language, even the phrase ‘each other’
    doesn’t make sense any more.”
    Coleman Barks

  • #4
    D.W. Winnicott
    “It is a joy to be hidden, and disaster not to be found.”
    D.W. Winnicott

  • #5
    Jorge Luis Borges
    “Being with you and not being with you is the only way I have to measure time.”
    Jorge Luis Borges

  • #6
    Jorge Luis Borges
    “A writer - and, I believe, generally all persons - must think that whatever happens to him or her is a resource. All things have been given to us for a purpose, and an artist must feel this more intensely. All that happens to us, including our humiliations, our misfortunes, our embarrassments, all is given to us as raw material, as clay, so that we may shape our art.”
    Jorge Luis Borges, Twenty-Four Conversations with Borges: Interviews by Roberto Alifano 1981-1983

  • #7
    Jorge Luis Borges
    “When writers die they become books, which is, after all, not too bad an incarnation."

    [As attributed by Alastair Reid in Neruda and Borges, The New Yorker, June 24, 1996; as well as in The Talk of the Town, The New Yorker, July 7, 1986]”
    Jorge Luis Borges

  • #8
    Jorge Luis Borges
    “A book is more than a verbal structure or series of verbal structures; it is the dialogue it establishes with its reader and the intonation it imposes upon his voice and the changing and durable images it leaves in his memory. A book is not an isolated being: it is a relationship, an axis of innumerable relationships.”
    Jorge Luis Borges

  • #9
    Jorge Luis Borges
    “Don't talk unless you can improve the silence.”
    Jorge Luis Borges

  • #10
    “If I could live again my life,
    In the next - I'll try,
    - to make more mistakes,
    I won't try to be so perfect,
    I'll be more relaxed...
    I'll take fewer things seriously..
    I'll take more risks,
    I'll take more trips,
    I'll watch more sunsets,
    I'll climb more mountains,
    I'll swim more rivers,
    I'll go to more places I've never been
    I'll eat more ice ...I'll have more real problems and less imaginary ones

    If I could live again - I will travel light
    If I could live again - I'll try to work bare feet at the beginning of spring till the end of autumn,
    I'll watch more sunrises ...If I have the life to live”
    Anonymous

  • #11
    Jorge Luis Borges
    “To die for a religion is easier than to live it absolutely.”
    Jorge Luis Borges

  • #12
    Jorge Luis Borges
    “Music, feelings of happiness, mythology, faces worn by time, certain twilights and certain places, want to tell us something, or they told us something that we should not have missed, or they are about to tell us something; this imminence of a revelation that is not produced is, perhaps, 'the aesthetic event'.”
    Jorge Luis Borges

  • #13
    Jorge Luis Borges
    “There are those who seek the love of a woman to forget her, to not think about her.”
    Jorge Luis Borges, The Aleph and Other Stories

  • #14
    Jorge Luis Borges
    “I...have always known that my destiny was, above all, a literary destiny — that bad things and some good things would happen to me, but that, in the long run, all of it would be converted
    into words. Particularly the bad things, since happiness does not need to be transformed: happiness is its own end.”
    Jorge Luis Borges, Seven Nights

  • #15
    Jorge Luis Borges
    “The dictionary is based on the hypothesis -- obviously an unproven one -- that languages are made up of equivalent synonyms.”
    Jorge Luis Borges

  • #16
    Jorge Luis Borges
    “I thought that a man can be an enemy of other men, of the moments of other men, but not of a country: not of fireflies, words, gardens, streams of water, sunsets.”
    Jorge Luis Borges

  • #17
    W. Somerset Maugham
    “Its a toss-up when you decide to leave the beaten track. Many are called, few are chosen.”
    W. Somerset Maugham, The Razor's Edge

  • #18
    W. Somerset Maugham
    “The important thing was to love rather than to be loved.”
    W. Somerset Maugham, Of Human Bondage

  • #19
    W. Somerset Maugham
    “We do not write because we want to; we write because we have to.”
    W. Somerset Maugham

  • #20
    Michel Foucault
    “People know what they do; frequently they know why they do what they do; but what they don't know is what what they do does.”
    Michel Foucault, Madness and Civilization: A History of Insanity in the Age of Reason

  • #21
    Ludwig Wittgenstein
    “If anyone is unwilling to descend into himself, because this is too painful, he will remain superficial in his writing. . . If I perform to myself, then it’s this that the style expresses. And then the style cannot be my own. If you are unwilling to know what you are, your writing is a form of deceit.”
    Ludwig Wittgenstein

  • #22
    Ludwig Wittgenstein
    “What is troubling us is the tendency to believe that the mind is like a little man within.”
    Ludwig Wittgenstein

  • #23
    Ludwig Wittgenstein
    “Ethics and aesthetics are one.”
    Ludwig Wittgenstein, Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus

  • #24
    David Markson
    “Was it really some other person I was so anxious to discover...or was it only my own solitude that I could not abide?”
    David Markson, Wittgenstein’s Mistress

  • #25
    Umberto Eco
    “The order that our mind imagines is like a net, or like a ladder, built to attain something. But afterward you must throw the ladder away, because you discover that, even if it was useful, it was meaningless.”
    Umberto Eco, The Name of the Rose

  • #26
    Ludwig Wittgenstein
    “If in life we are surrounded by death, then in the health of our intellect we are surrounded by madness.”
    Ludwig Wittgenstein and Cyril Barrett

  • #27
    Ludwig Wittgenstein
    “The mystical is not how the world is, but that it is.”
    Ludwig Wittgenstein

  • #28
    Ludwig Wittgenstein
    “I give no sources, because it is indifferent to me
    whether what I have thought has already been
    thought before me by another.”
    Ludwig Wittgenstein, Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus

  • #29
    Stephen W. Hawking
    “In the eighteenth century, philosophers considered the whole of human knowledge, including science, to be their field and discussed questions such as: Did the universe have a beginning? However, in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, science became too technical and mathematical for the philosophers, or anyone else except a few specialists. Philosophers reduced the scope of their inquiries so much that Wittgenstein, the most famous philosopher of this century, said, "The sole remaining task for philosophy is the analysis of language." What a comedown from the great tradition of philosophy from Aristotle to Kant!”
    Stephen Hawking, A Brief History of Time

  • #30
    Thomas Pynchon
    “Kekulé dreams the Great Serpent holding its own tail in its mouth, the dreaming Serpent which surrounds the World. But the meanness, the cynicism with which this dream is to be used. The Serpent that announces, "The World is a closed thing, cyclical, resonant, eternally-returning," is to be delivered into a system whose only aim is to violate the Cycle. Taking and not giving back, demanding that "productivity" and "earnings" keep on increasing with time, the System removing from the rest of the World these vast quantities of energy to keep its own tiny desperate fraction showing a profit: and not only most of humanity—most of the World, animal, vegetable, and mineral, is laid waste in the process. The System may or may not understand that it's only buying time. And that time is an artificial resource to begin with, of no value to anyone or anything but the System, which must sooner or later crash to its death, when its addiction to energy has become more than the rest of the World can supply, dragging with it innocent souls all along the chain of life. Living inside the System is like riding across the country in a bus driven by a maniac bent on suicide . . . though he's amiable enough, keeps cracking jokes back through the loudspeaker . . .”
    Thomas Pynchon, Gravity’s Rainbow



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