Rania Moudarres > Rania's Quotes

Showing 1-30 of 32
« previous 1
sort by

  • #1
    Hayao Miyazaki
    “Cut off a wolf's head and it still has the power to bite.”
    Hayao Miyazaki, もののけ姫 [Mononoke hime]

  • #2
    Hayao Miyazaki
    “I would like to make a film to tell children "it's good to be alive".”
    Hayao Miyazaki

  • #3
    Joseph Campbell
    “How does the ordinary person come to the transcendent? For a start, I would say, study poetry. Learn how to read a poem. You need not have the experience to get the message, or at least some indication of the message. It may come gradually. (92)”
    Joseph Campbell, Thou Art That: Transforming Religious Metaphor

  • #4
    Walk as if you are kissing the Earth with your feet.
    “Walk as if you are kissing the Earth with your feet.”
    Thich Nhat Hanh, Peace Is Every Step: The Path of Mindfulness in Everyday Life

  • #5
    Charles Darwin
    “But Natural Selection, as we shall hereafter see, is a power incessantly ready for action, and is immeasurably superior to man's feeble efforts, as the works of Nature are to those of Art.”
    Charles Darwin, The Origin of Species

  • #6
    Vladimir Bartol
    “أتظن أن غالبية الناس تواقة لمعرفة الحقيقة؟
    لا علي الاطلاق ! انهم ينشدون الراحه ويسعدون بالاساطير التي تغذي مخيلاتهم.
    هل تظن أنهم يهتمون بالعدالة؟
    إنهم يهزأون منها شرط أن تحقق منفعتهم الشخصية.”
    Vladimir Bartol, Alamut

  • #7
    “Just as writing can become calligraphy when it’s creatively, skillfully, and consciously performed, so can all other activities become art. In this case, we are reflecting upon life itself as an artistic statement—the art of living.”
    H.E. Davey, Japanese Yoga: The Way of Dynamic Meditation

  • #8
    Alfred North Whitehead
    “The true method of discovery is like the flight of an aeroplane. It starts from the ground of particular observation; it makes a flight in the thin air of imaginative generalization; and it again lands for renewed observation rendered acute by rational interpretation.”
    Alfred North Whitehead, Process and Reality

  • #9
    Arkady Strugatsky
    “Or how about this hypothetical definition. Reason is a complex type of instinct that has not yet formed completely. This implies that instinctual behavior is always purposeful and natural. A million years from now our instinct will have matured and we will stop making the mistakes that are probably integral to reason. An then, if something should change in the universe, we will all become extinct - precisely because we will have forgotten how to make mistakes, that is, to try various approaches not stipulated by an inflexible program of permitted alternatives.”
    Arkady Strugatsky, Roadside Picnic

  • #10
    Arkady Strugatsky
    “Вы думаете, что если человек цитирует Зурзмансора или Гегеля, то это — о! А такой человек смотрит на Вас и видит кучу дерьма, ему Вас не жалко, потому что Вы и по Гегелю дерьмо, и по Зурзмансору тоже дерьмо. Дерьмо по определению. А что за границами этого дерьма — определения — его не интересует”
    Arkady Strugatsky, The Ugly Swans

  • #11
    Aleksei Losev
    “It's impossible to love under the electric light, it's only possible to observe a victim under it.”
    Aleksei Losev, فلسفة الأسطورة

  • #12
    Charles Sanders Peirce
    “My language is the sum total of myself.”
    Charles S. Peirce

  • #13
    Charles Sanders Peirce
    “We think only in signs.”
    Charles Sanders Peirce

  • #14
    Edmund Husserl
    “First, anyone who seriously intends to become a philosopher
    must "once in his life" withdraw into himself and attempt,
    within himself, to overthrow and build anew all the sciences
    that, up to then, he has been accepting. Philosophy wisdom
    (sagesse) is the philosophizer's quite personal affair. It must
    arise as His wisdom, as his self-acquired knowledge tending
    toward universality, a knowledge for which he can answer from
    the beginning, and at each step, by virtue of his own absolute
    insights.”
    Edmund Husserl, Cartesian Meditations: An Introduction to Phenomenology

  • #15
    Walter Benjamin
    “A Klee painting named 'Angelus Novus' shows an angel looking as though he is about to move away from something he is fixedly contemplating. His eyes are staring, his mouth is open, his wings are spread. This is how one pictures the angel of history. His face is turned toward the past. Where we perceive a chain of events, he sees one single catastrophe which keeps piling wreckage upon wreckage and hurls it in front of his feet. The angel would like to stay, awaken the dead, and make whole what has been smashed. But a storm is blowing from Paradise; it has got caught in his wings with such violence that the angel can no longer close them. This storm irresistibly propels him into the future to which his back is turned, while the pile of debris before him grows skyward. This storm is what we call progress.”
    Walter Benjamin

  • #16
    Walter Benjamin
    “The work of memory collapses time.”
    Walter Benjamin

  • #17
    Sergei Rachmaninoff
    “Music is enough for a lifetime, but a lifetime is not enough for music.”
    Sergei Rachmaninov

  • #18
    Giacomo Leopardi
    “Reason is the enemy of all greatness: reason is the enemy of nature: nature is great, reason is small. I mean that it will be more or less difficult for a man to be great the more he is governed by reason, that few can be great (and in art and poetry perhaps no one) unless they are governed by illusions.”
    Giacomo Leopardi

  • #19
    Terence McKenna
    “Not to know one's true identity is to be a mad, disensouled thing — a golem. And, indeed, this image, sick-eningly Orwellian, applies to the mass of human beings now living in the high-tech industrial democracies. Their authenticity lies in their ability to obey and follow mass style changes that are conveyed through the media. Immersed in junk food, trash media, and cryp-tofascist politics, they are condemned to toxic lives of low awareness. Sedated by the prescripted daily television fix, they are a living dead, lost to all but the act of consuming.”
    Terence McKenna, Food of the Gods: The Search for the Original Tree of Knowledge

  • #20
    Terence McKenna
    “Like the octopi, our destiny is to become what we think, to have our thoughts become our bodies and our bodies become our thoughts. This is the essence of the more perfect Logos envisioned by the Hellenistic polymath Philo Judaeus—a Logos, an indwelling of the Goddess, not heard but beheld. Hans Jonas explains Philo Judaeus's concept as follows:
    A more perfect archetypal logos, exempt from the human duality of sign and thing, and therefore not bound by the forms of speech, would not require the mediation of hearing, but is immediately beheld by the mind as the truth of things.”
    Terence McKenna, Food of the Gods: The Search for the Original Tree of Knowledge

  • #21
    Luce Irigaray
    “Your silence exists as does my self gathering. But so does the almost absolute silence of the world's dawning. In such suspension, before every utterance on earth, there is a cloud, an almost immobile air. The plants already breathe, while we still ask ourselves how to speak to each other, without taking breath away from them.”
    Luce Irigaray, To Be Two

  • #22
    Luce Irigaray
    “Sexual difference is probably the issue in our time which could be our 'salvation' if we thought it through.”
    Luce Irigaray

  • #23
    Wilhelm Reich
    “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 … when your thinking is in harmony, and no longer in conflict, with your feelings … when you let yourself be guided by the thoughts of great sages and no longer by the crimes of great warriors … 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...”
    Wilhelm Reich, Listen, Little Man!

  • #24
    Wilhelm Reich
    “Only the liberation of the natural capacity for love in human beings can master their sadistic destructiveness.”
    Wilhelm Reich

  • #25
    Jun'ichirō Tanizaki
    “But it is on occasions like this that I always think how different everything would be if we in the Orient had developed our own science. Suppose for instance that we had developed our own physics and chemistry: would not the techniques and industries based on them have taken a different form, would not our myriads of everyday gadgets, our medicines, the products of our industrial art - would they not have suited our national temper better than they do?”
    Jun'ichirō Tanizaki, In Praise of Shadows

  • #26
    Luce Irigaray
    “Your body expresses yesterday in what it wants today. If you think: yesterday I was, tomorrow I shall be, you are thinking: I have died a little. Be what you are becoming, without clinging to what you might have been, what you might yet be. Never settle. Leave definitiveness to the undecided; we don't need it.”
    Luce Irigaray, This Sex Which is Not One

  • #27
    R.D. Laing
    “The condition of alienation, of being asleep, of being unconscious, of being out of one’s mind, is the condition of the normal man. Society highly values its normal man. It educates children to lose themselves and to become absurd, and thus to be normal. Normal men have killed perhaps 100,000,000 of their fellow normal men in the last fifty years.”
    R.D. Laing, The Politics of Experience/The Bird of Paradise

  • #28
    R.D. Laing
    “What we call ‘normal’ is a product of repression, denial, splitting, projection, introjection and other forms of destructive action on experience. It is radically estranged from the structure of being. The more one sees this, the more senseless it is to continue with generalized descriptions of supposedly specifically schizoid, schizophrenic, hysterical ‘mechanisms.’ There are forms of alienation that are relatively strange to statistically ‘normal’ forms of alienation. The ‘normally’ alienated person, by reason of the fact that he acts more or less like everyone else, is taken to be sane. Other forms of alienation that are out of step with the prevailing state of alienation are those that are labeled by the ‘formal’ majority as bad or mad.”
    R.D. Laing, The Politics of Experience/The Bird of Paradise

  • #29
    R.D. Laing
    “The Lotus opens. Movement from earth, through water, from fire to air. Out and in beyond life and death now, beyond inner and outer, sense and non-sense, meaning and futility, male and female, being and non-being, Light and darkness, void and full. Beyond all duality, or non-duality, beyond and beyond. Disincarnation. I breathe again.”
    R.D. Laing, Politics Of Experience

  • #30
    R.D. Laing
    “All groups operate by means of phantasy. The type of experience a group gives us is one of the main reasons, if not for some people the only reason, for being in a group. What do people want to get from the experience of being in a particular set of human collectivities?
    The close-knit groups that occur in some families and other groupings are bound together by the need to find pseudo-real experience that can be found only through the modality of phantasy. This means that the family is not experienced as the modality of phantasy but as ‘reality’. However, ‘reality’ in this sense is not a modality, but a quality attachable to any modality.
    If a family member has a tenable position within the family phantasy system, his call to leave the system in any sense is likely only to come from outside the phantasy system. We vary in readiness, and in desire, to emerge from the unconscious phantasy systems we take to be our realities. As long as we are in apparently tenable positions, we find every reason not to suppose that we are in a false sense of reality or unreality, security or insecurity, identity or lack of identity.
    A false social sense of reality entails, among other things, phantasy unrecognized as such. If [someone] begins to wake up from the [group] phantasy system, he can only be classified as mad or bad by [that group] since to them their phantasy is reality, and what is not their phantasy is not real.”
    R.D. Laing, Self and Others



Rss
« previous 1