Arturo Cuscó > Arturo's Quotes

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  • #1
    Ernest Hemingway
    “There is nothing noble in being superior to your fellow man; true nobility is being superior to your former self.”
    Ernest Hemingway

  • #2
    C.G. Jung
    “People will do anything, no matter how absurd, in order to avoid facing their own souls. One does not become enlightened by imagining figures of light, but by making the darkness conscious.”
    Carl Jung, Psychology and Alchemy

  • #3
    Arthur Koestler
    “The principal mark of genius is not perfection but originality, the opening of new frontiers.”
    Arthur Koestler

  • #4
    Arthur Koestler
    “Satan, on the contrary, is thin, ascetic and a fanatical devotee of logic. He reads Machiavelli, Ignatius of Loyola, Marx and Hegel; he is cold and unmerciful to mankind, out of a kind of mathematical mercifulness. He is damned always to do that which is most repugnant to him: to become a slaughterer, in order to abolish slaughtering, to sacrifice lambs so that no more lambs may be slaughtered, to whip people with knouts so that they may learn not to let themselves be whipped, to strip himself of every scruple in the name of a higher scrupulousness, and to challenge the hatred of mankind because of his love for it--an abstract and geometric love.”
    Arthur Koestler, Darkness at Noon

  • #5
    Arthur Koestler
    “Nothing is more sad than the death of an illusion. ”
    Arthur Koestler

  • #6
    Arthur Koestler
    “Creativity is the defeat of habit by originality.”
    Arthur Koestler

  • #7
    Arthur Koestler
    “The Party denied the free will of the individual - and at the same
    time it exacted his willing self-sacrifice. It denied his capacity to
    choose between two alternatives - and at the same time it demanded that he
    should constantly choose the right one. It denied his power to distinguish
    good and evil - and at the same time spoke pathetically of guilt and
    treachery. The individual stood under the sign of economic fatality, a
    wheel in a clockwork which had been wound up for all eternity and could
    not be stopped or influenced - and the Party demanded that the wheel
    should revolt against the clockwork and change its course. There was
    somewhere an error in the calculation; the equation did not work out.”
    Arthur Koestler, Darkness at Noon

  • #8
    Arthur Koestler
    “I went to Communism as one goes to a spring of fresh water, and I left Communism as one clambers out of a poisoned river strewn with the wreckage of flooded cities and the corpses of the drowned.”
    Arthur Koestler

  • #9
    Arthur Koestler
    “Honor is decency without vanity.”
    Arthur Koestler, Darkness at Noon

  • #10
    Arthur Koestler
    “When one contemplates the streak of insanity running through human history, it appears highly probable that homo sapiens is a biological freak, the result of some remarkable mistake in the evolutionary process. The ancient doctrine of original sin, variants of which occur independently in the mythologies of diverse cultures, could be a reflection of man's awareness of his own inadequacy, of the intuitive hunch that somewhere along the line of his ascent something has gone wrong.”
    Arthur Koestler, The Ghost in the Machine

  • #11
    Arthur Koestler
    “I don't approve of mixing ideologies," Ivanov continued. "There are only two conceptions of human ethics, and they are at opposite poles. One of them is Christian and humane, declares the individual to be sacrosanct, and asserts that the rules of arithmetic are not to be applied to human units. The other starts from the basic principle that a collective aim justifies all means, and not only allows, but demands, that the individual should in every way be subordinated and sacrificed to the community--which may dispose of it as an experimentation rabbit or a sacrificial lamb. The first conception could be called anti-vivisection morality, the second, vivisection morality. Humbugs and dilettantes have always tried to mix the two conceptions; in practice, it is impossible.”
    Arthur Koestler, Darkness at Noon

  • #12
    Arthur Koestler
    “[My father] loved me tenderly and shyly from a distance, and later on took a naive pride in seeing my name in print.”
    Arthur Koestler

  • #13
    Leo Tolstoy
    “If you look for perfection, you'll never be content.”
    Leo Tolstoy, Anna Karenina



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