Philippe Fanaro > Philippe's Quotes

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  • #1
    “Practice does not make perfect. Perfect practice makes perfect.”
    Vince Lombardi

  • #2
    Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
    “Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away.”
    Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, Airman's Odyssey

  • #3
    Albert Einstein
    “Make things as simple as possible, but no simpler.”
    Albert Einstein, Selected Writings

  • #4
    Blaise Pascal
    “All of humanity's problems stem from man's inability to sit quietly in a room alone.”
    Blaise Pascal, Pensées

  • #5
    Marquis de Sade
    “You say that my way of thinking cannot be tolerated? What of it? The man who alters his way of thinking to suit othere is a fool. My way of thinking is the result of my reflections. It is part of my inner being,the way I am made. I do not contradict them, and would not even if I wished to. For my system, which you disapprove of is also my greatest comfort in life, the source of all my happiness -it means more to me than my life itself.”
    Marquis de Sade

  • #6
    Dorothy Parker
    “Writing is the art of applying the ass to the seat.”
    Dorothy Parker

  • #7
    Marquis de Sade
    “Social order at the expense of liberty is hardly a bargain”
    Marquis de Sade

  • #8
    Marquis de Sade
    “Fuck! Is one expected to be a gentleman when one is stiff?”
    Marquis De Sade

  • #9
    Joseph Stalin
    “Those who vote decide nothing. Those who count the vote decide everything.”
    Joseph Stalin
    tags: vote

  • #10
    Mark Twain
    “The two most important days in your life are the day you are born and the day you find out why.”
    Mark Twain

  • #11
    Trevanian
    “Go is to Western chess what philosophy is to double-entry accounting.”
    Trevanian, Shibumi

  • #12
    Diogenes of Sinope
    “Alexander the Great found the philosopher looking attentively at a pile of human bones. Diogenes explained, "I am searching for the bones of your father but cannot distinguish them from those of a slave.”
    Diogenes

  • #13
    Diogenes of Sinope
    “Of what use is a philosopher who doesn't hurt anybody's feelings?”
    Diogenes of Sinope

  • #14
    Diogenes of Sinope
    “It is the privilege of the gods to want nothing, and of godlike men to want little.”
    Diogenes of Sinope

  • #15
    Diogenes of Sinope
    “I am a citizen of the world.”
    Diogenes of Sinope, The Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers

  • #16
    Diogenes of Sinope
    “The foundation of every state is the education of its youth.”
    Diogenes

  • #17
    Diogenes of Sinope
    “When some one reminded him that the people of Sinope had sentenced him to exile, he said, "And I sentenced them to stay at home.”
    Diogenes

  • #18
    Diogenes of Sinope
    “Once he saw the officials of a temple leading away some one who had stolen a bowl belonging to the treasurers, and said, "The great thieves are leading away the little thief.”
    Diogenes

  • #19
    Yuval Noah Harari
    “Diogenes, the Greek philosopher who founded the Cynical school, lived in a barrel. When Alexander the Great once visited Diogenes as he was relaxing in the sun, and asked if there were anything he might do for him, the Cynic answered the all-powerful conqueror, ‘Yes, there is something you can do for me. Please move a little to the side. You are blocking the sunlight.”
    Yuval Noah Harari, Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind

  • #20
    “Diogenes the Cynic was an ascetic by choice. He rejected his family's bourgeois status, got himself exiled from his native city, and went about in a threadbare cloak with only the barest possessions, a bag for his crust of bread and a cup for scooping water from fountains. When one day he saw a boy drinking from his hands, he smashed the cup, disgusted by his own love of luxury.”
    James Romm, Dying Every Day: Seneca at the Court of Nero

  • #21
    Diogenes Laertius
    “Of what am I guilty," once exclaimed Antisthenes, "that I should be praised?”
    Diogenes Laërtius, Stoic Six Pack 5: The Cynics: An Introduction to Cynic Philosophy/The Moral Sayings of Publius Syrus/Life of Antisthenes/The Symposium, Book 4/Life of Diogenes/Life of Crates

  • #22
    “When he saw the child of some prostitute throw stones at a crowd, Diogenes shouted to him, "Take care that you don't hit your father!”
    Luis E. Navia, Diogenes The Cynic: The War Against The World
    tags: humor

  • #23
    “Those who find the world something worthy of praise or who congratulate themselves for having been born in it are either intellectually blind or morally perverse.”
    Luis E. Navia, Diogenes The Cynic: The War Against The World

  • #24
    Philip K. Dick
    “DICK: I think philosophically I fit in with some of the very late pre-Socratic people around the time of Zeno and Diogenes—the Cynics, in the Greek sense. I am inevitably persuaded by every argument that is brought to bear.”
    Philip K. Dick, Philip K. Dick: The Last Interview: and Other Conversations

  • #25
    François de La Rochefoucauld
    “There are some people who would never have fallen in love if they had not heard there was such a thing.”
    Francois La Rochefoucauld

  • #26
    Mladen Đorđević
    “All is big, until it is solved to become small.”
    Mladen Đorđević, Svetioničar - Pritajeno zlo

  • #27
    Paul Valéry
    “Aux yeux de ces amateurs d’inquiétude et de perfection, un ouvrage n’est jamais achevé, – mot qui pour eux n’a aucun sens, – mais abandonné.”
    Paul Valéry

  • #28
    Paul Valéry
    “In the eyes of those who anxiously seek perfection, a work is never truly completed—a word that for them has no sense—but abandoned.”
    Paul Valéry

  • #29
    Albert Einstein
    “We can not solve our problems with the same level of thinking that created them”
    Albert Einstein

  • #30
    Gilles Deleuze
    “Let us take a limited example and compare the war machine and the state apparatus in the context of the theory of games. Let us take chess and Go, from the standpoint of game pieces, the relations between the pieces and the space involved. Chess is a game of the State, or of the court: the emperor of China played it. Chess pieces are coded; they have an internal nature and intrinsic properties from which their movements, situations, and confrontations derive. They have qualities; a knight remains a knight, a pawn a pawn, a bishop a bishop. Each is like a subject of the statement endowed with relative power, and these relative powers combine in a subject of enunciation, that is, the chess player or the game’s form of interiority. Go pieces, I contrast, are pellets, disks, simple arithmetic units, and have only an anonymous, collective, or third-person function: “It” makes a move. “It” could be a man, a woman, a louse, an elephant. Go pieces are elements of a nonsubjectified machine assemblage with no intrinsic properties, only situational ones. Thus the relations are very different in the two cases.

    Within their milieu of interiority, chess pieces entertain biunivocal relations with one another, and with the adversary’s pieces: their functioning is structural. One the other hand, a Go piece has only a milieu of exteriority, or extrinsic relations with nebulas or constellations, according to which it fulfills functions of insertion or situation, such as bordering, encircling, shattering. All by itself, a Go piece can destroy an entire constellation synchronically; a chess piece cannot (or can do so diachronically only). Chess is indeed a war, but an institutionalized, regulated, coded war with a front, a rear, battles. But what is proper to Go is war without battle lines, with neither confrontation nor retreat, without battles even: pure strategy, whereas chess is a semiology. Finally, the space is not at all the same: in chess, it is a question of arranging a closed space for oneself, thus going from one point to another, of occupying the maximum number of squares with the minimum number of pieces. In Go, it is a question of arraying oneself in an open space, of holding space, of maintaining the possibility of springing up at any point: the movement is not from one point to another, but becomes perpetual, without aim or destination, without departure or arrival. The “smooth” space of Go, as against the “striated” space of chess. The nomos of Go against the State of chess, nomos against polis. The difference is that chess codes and decodes space, whereas Go proceeds altogether differently, territorializing and deterritorializing it (make the outside a territory in space; consolidate that territory by the construction of a second, adjacent territory; deterritorialize the enemy by shattering his territory from within; deterritorialize oneself by renouncing, by going elsewhere…) Another justice, another movement, another space-time.”
    Gilles Deleuze y Féliz Guattari



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