Caitlin.epme.com > Caitlin.epme.com's Quotes

Showing 1-30 of 97
« previous 1 3 4
sort by

  • #1
    Henry Rollins
    “I could fall in love with a cruel desert that kills without passion, a canyon full of scorpions, one thousand blinding arctic storms, a century sealed in a cave, a river of molten salt flowing down my throat. But never with you.”
    Henry Rollins, Solipsist

  • #2
    Susan Sontag
    “Do stuff. be clenched, curious. Not waiting for inspiration's shove or society's kiss on your forehead. Pay attention. It's all about paying attention. attention is vitality. It connects you with others. It makes you eager. stay eager.”
    Susan Sontag

  • #3
    Susan Sontag
    “I want to be able to be alone, to find it nourishing - not just a waiting.”
    Susan Sontag, Reborn: Journals and Notebooks, 1947-1963

  • #4
    Georges Bataille
    “I believe that truth has only one face: that of a violent contradiction.”
    Georges Bataille, Violent Silence: Celebrating Georges Bataille

  • #5
    Georges Bataille
    “To others, the universe seems decent because decent people have gelded eyes. That is why they fear lewdness. They are never frightened by the crowing of a rooster or when strolling under a starry heaven. In general, people savor the "pleasures of the flesh" only on condition that they be insipid.
    But as of then, no doubt existed for me: I did not care for what is known as "pleasures of the flesh" because they really are insipid; I cared only for what is classified as "dirty." On the other hand, I was not even satisfied with the usual debauchery, because the only thing it dirties is debauchery itself, while, in some way or other, anything sublime and perfectly pure is left intact by it. My kind of debauchery soils not only my body and my thoughts, but also anything I may conceive in its course, that is to say, the vast starry universe, which merely serves as a backdrop.”
    Georges Bataille, Story of the Eye

  • #6
    Georges Bataille
    “In what will survive me
    I am in harmony
    with my annihilation.”
    Georges Bataille

  • #7
    Georges Bataille
    “Intellectual despair results in neither weakness nor dreams, but in violence. It is only a matter of knowing how to give vent to one's rage; whether one only wants to wander like madmen around prisons, or whether one wants to overturn them.”
    Georges Bataille

  • #8
    Paul Bowles
    “Security is a false God. Begin to make sacrifices to it and you are lost.”
    Paul Bowles

  • #9
    Paul Bowles
    “Illness reduces man to his basic state: a cloaca in which the chemical processes continue. The meaningless hegemony of the involuntary.”
    Paul Bowles, The Sheltering Sky

  • #10
    Paul Bowles
    “Everyone is isolated from everyone else. The concept of society is like a cushion to protect us from the knowledge of that isolation. A fiction that serves as an anesthetic.”
    Paul Bowles

  • #11
    Paul Bowles
    “We get to think of life as an inexhaustible well…How many more times will you watch the full moon rise? Perhaps twenty. And yet it all seems limitless.”
    Paul Bowles

  • #12
    Paul Bowles
    “He could not feel at ease with gourmets and hedonists; they were a hostile species.”
    Paul Bowles, The Spider's House

  • #13
    Émile Durkheim
    “Melancholy suicide. —This is connected with a general state of extreme depression and exaggerated sadness, causing the patient no longer to realize sanely the bonds which connect him with people and things about him. Pleasures no longer attract;”
    Émile Durkheim, Suicide: A Study in Sociology

  • #14
    Flannery O'Connor
    “The Catholic novelist in the South will see many distorted images of Christ, but he will certainly feel that a distorted image of Christ is better than no image at all. I think he will feel a good deal more kinship with backwoods prophets and shouting fundamentalists than he will with those politer elements for whom the supernatural is an embarrassment and for whom religion has become a department of sociology or culture or personality development.”
    Flannery O'Connor

  • #15
    Graham Greene
    “One can't love humanity. One can only love people.”
    Graham Greene, The Ministry of Fear

  • #16
    Leo Tolstoy
    “What is the cause of historical events? Power. What is power? Power is the sum total of wills transferred to one person. On what condition are the willso fo the masses transferred to one person? On condition that the person express the will of the whole people. That is, power is power. That is, power is a word the meaning of which we do not understand. ”
    Leo Tolstoy, War and Peace

  • #17
    Robert A. Heinlein
    “My dear, I used to think I was serving humanity . . . and I pleasured in the thought. Then I discovered that humanity does not want to be served; on the contrary it resents any attempt to serve it. So now I do what pleases myself.”
    Robert A. Heinlein, Stranger in a Strange Land

  • #18
    Jostein Gaarder
    “People are, generally speaking, either dead certain or totally indifferent.”
    Jostein Gaarder, Sophie’s World

  • #19
    Ray Bradbury
    “Ah, art! Ah, life! The pendulum swinging back and forth, from complex to simple, again to complex. From romantic to realistic, back to romantic. ”
    Ray Bradbury, The October Country

  • #20
    Neil Postman
    “Our politics, religion, news, athletics, education and commerce have been transformed into congenial adjuncts of show business, largely without protest or even much popular notice. The result is that we are a people on the verge of amusing ourselves to death.”
    Neil Postman

  • #21
    Toni Morrison
    “Black literature is taught as sociology, as tolerance, not as a serious, rigorous art form.”
    Toni Morrison

  • #22
    Graham Greene
    “Pity is cruel. Pity destroys.”
    Graham Greene, The Ministry of Fear

  • #23
    Viktor E. Frankl
    “As a professor in two fields, neurology and psychiatry, I am fully aware of the extent to which man is subject to biological, psychological and sociological conditions. But in addition to being a professor in two fields I am a survivor of four camps - concentration camps, that is - and as such I also bear witness to the unexpected extent to which man is capable of defying and braving even the worst conditions conceivable.”
    Viktor Emil Frankl, Man's Search for Meaning

  • #24
    Sam Harris
    “Your frequent claim that we must understand religious belief as a “social construct,” produced by “societal causes,” dependent upon “social and cultural institutions,” admitting of “sociological questions,” and the like, while it will warm the hearts of most anthropologists, is either trivially true or obscurantist. It is part and parcel of the double standard that so worries me—the demolition of which is the explicit aim of The Reason Project.

    Epidemiology is also a “social construct” with “societal causes,” etc.—but this doesn’t mean that the germ theory of disease isn’t true or that any rival “construct”—like one suggesting that child rape will cure AIDS—isn’t a dangerous, deplorable, and unnecessary eruption of primeval stupidity. We either have good reasons or bad reasons for what we believe; we can be open to evidence and argument, or we can be closed; we can tolerate (and even seek) criticism of our most cherished views, or we can hide behind authority, sanctity, and dogma. The main reason why children are still raised to think that the universe is 6,000 years old is not because religion as a “social institution” hasn’t been appropriately coddled and cajoled, but because polite people (and scientists terrified of losing their funding) haven’t laughed this belief off the face of the earth.

    We did not lose a decade of progress on stem-cell research in the United States because of religion as a “social construct”; we lost it because of the behavioural and emotional consequences of a specific belief. If there were a line in the book of Genesis that read – “The soul enters the womb on the hundredth day (you idiots)” – we wouldn’t have lost a step on stem-cell research, and there would not be a Christian or Jew anywhere who would worry about souls in Petri dishes suffering the torments of the damned. The beliefs currently rattling around in the heads of human beings are some of the most potent forces on earth; some of the craziest and most divisive of these are “religious,” and so-dubbed they are treated with absurd deference, even in the halls of science; this is a very bad combination—that is my point. ”
    Sam Harris

  • #25
    David Richo
    “The more invested I am in my own ideas about reality, the more those experiences will feel like victimizations rather than the ups and downs of relating. Actually, I believe that the less I conceptualize things that way, the more likely it is that people will want to stay by me, because they will not feel burdened, consciously or unconsciously, by my projections, judgments, entitlements, or unrealistic expectations.”
    David Richo, Daring to Trust: Opening Ourselves to Real Love and Intimacy

  • #26
    Émile Durkheim
    “Man cannot become attached to higher aims and submit to a rule if he sees nothing above him to which he belongs. To free him from all social pressure is to abandon him to himself and demoralize him.”
    Émile Durkheim, Suicide: A Study in Sociology

  • #27
    Ludwig von Mises
    “All rational action is in the first place individual action. Only the individual thinks. Only the individual reasons. Only the individual acts.”
    Ludwig von Mises, Socialism: An Economic and Sociological Analysis

  • #28
    Paul Bowles
    “Immediately when you arrive in Sahara, for the first or the tenth time, you notice the stillness. An incredible, absolute silence prevails outside the towns; and within, even in busy places like the markets, there is a hushed quality in the air, as if the quiet were a conscious force which, resenting the intrusion of sound, minimizes and disperses sound straightaway. Then there is the sky, compared to which all other skies seem fainthearted efforts. Solid and luminous, it is always the focal point of the landscape. At sunset, the precise, curved shadow of the earth rises into it swiftly from the horizon, cutting into light section and dark section. When all daylight is gone, and the space is thick with stars, it is still of an intense and burning blue, darkest directly overhead and paling toward the earth, so that the night never really goes dark.
    You leave the gate of the fort or town behind, pass the camels lying outside, go up into the dunes, or out onto the hard, stony plain and stand awhile alone. Presently, you will either shiver and hurry back inside the walls, or you will go on standing there and let something very peculiar happen to you, something that everyone who lives there has undergone and which the French call 'le bapteme de solitude.' It is a unique sensation, and it has nothing to do with loneliness, for loneliness presupposes memory. Here in this wholly mineral landscape lighted by stars like flares, even memory disappears...A strange, and by no means pleasant, process of reintergration begins inside you, and you have the choice of fighting against it, and insisting on remaining the person you have always been, or letting it take its course. For no one who has stayed in the Sahara for a while is quite the same as when he came.
    ...Perhaps the logical question to ask at this point is: Why go? The answer is that when a man has been there and undergone the baptism of solitude he can't help himself. Once he has been under the spell of the vast luminous, silent country, no other place is quite strong enough for him, no other surroundings can provide the supremely satisfying sensation of existing in the midst of something that is absolute. He will go back, whatever the cost in time or money, for the absolute has no price.”
    Paul Bowles, Their Heads are Green and Their Hands are Blue: Scenes from the Non-Christian World

  • #29
    Paul Bowles
    “She was saved from prettiness by the intensity of her gaze.”
    Paul Bowles, The Sheltering Sky

  • #30
    Paul Bowles
    “The soul is the weariest part of the body.”
    Paul Bowles, The Sheltering Sky
    tags: soul



Rss
« previous 1 3 4