Maia Donachy > Maia's Quotes

Showing 1-30 of 187
« previous 1 3 4 5 6 7
sort by

  • #1
    James Hillman
    “Our dreams recover what the world forgets.”
    James Hillman, Animal Presences

  • #2
    James Hillman
    “Of course, a culture as manically and massively materialistic as ours creates materialistic behavior in its people, especially in those people who've been subjected to nothing but the destruction of imagination that this culture calls education, the destruction of autonomy it calls work, and the destruction of activity it calls entertainment.”
    James Hillman, We've Had a Hundred Years of Psychotherapy & the World's Getting Worse

  • #3
    James Hillman
    “To hope for nothing, to expect nothing, to demand nothing. This is analytical despair.”
    James Hillman, Suicide and the Soul

  • #4
    James Hillman
    “Recognize the call as a prime fact of human existence; (b) align life with it; (c) find the common sense to realize that accidents, including the heartache and the natural shocks the flesh is heir to, belong to the pattern of the image, are necessary to it, and help fulfill it. A calling may be postponed, avoided, intermittently missed. It may also possess you completely. Whatever; eventually it will out. It makes its claim. The daimon does not go away.”
    James Hillman, The Soul's Code: In Search of Character and Calling

  • #5
    Joseph Campbell
    “Sit in a room and read--and read and read. And read the right books by the right people. Your mind is brought onto that level, and you have a nice, mild, slow-burning rapture all the time.”
    Joseph Campbell, The Power of Myth

  • #7
    Vernon Howard
    “Human sickness is so severe that few can bear to look at it...but those who do will become well.”
    Vernon Howard

  • #7
    Vernon Howard
    “It is a mistake for anyone to think he has lived too long in his old, unsatisfactory ways to make the great change. If you switch on the light in a dark room, it makes no difference how long it was dark because the light will still shine. Be teachable. That is the whole secret.



    Vernon Howard

  • #8
    Rollo May
    “There can be no stronger proof of the impoverishment of our contemporary culture than the popular - though profoundly mistaken - definition of myth as falsehood.”
    Rollo May

  • #9
    Rollo May
    “Good art wounds as well as delights. It must, because our defenses against the truth are wound so tightly around us. But as art chips away at our defenses, it also opens us to healing potentialities that transcend intellectual games and ego-preserving strategies.”
    Rollo May, My Quest for Beauty

  • #10
    Franz Kafka
    “I think we ought to read only the kind of books that wound or stab us. If the book we're reading doesn't wake us up with a blow to the head, what are we reading for? So that it will make us happy, as you write? Good Lord, we would be happy precisely if we had no books, and the kind of books that make us happy are the kind we could write ourselves if we had to. But we need books that affect us like a disaster, that grieve us deeply, like the death of someone we loved more than ourselves, like being banished into forests far from everyone, like a suicide. A book must be the axe for the frozen sea within us. That is my belief.”
    Franz Kafka

  • #11
    Erasmus
    “Your library is your paradise.”
    Desiderius Erasmus

  • #12
    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

  • #13
    C.G. Jung
    “Whatever is rejected from the self, appears in the world as an event.”
    Carl Gustav Jung

  • #14
    Roger Scruton
    “A writer who says that there are no truths, or that all truth is ‘merely relative,’ is asking you not to believe him. So don’t.”
    Roger Scruton, Modern Philosophy: An Introduction and Survey

  • #15
    Roger Scruton
    “The first axiom of Marx Scientist is that everything they tell you is a lie. The second axiom is that it doesn’t matter, since you are lying too. The third axiom is ‘Kill all liars!”
    Roger Scruton, Notes from Underground

  • #16
    Thomas Sowell
    “I think we're raising whole generations who regard facts as more or less optional.
    We have kids in elementary school who are being urged to take stands on political issues, to write letters to congressmen and presidents about nuclear energy.
    They're not a decade old, and they're being thrown these kinds of questions that can absorb the lifetime of a very brilliant and learned man. And they're being taught that it's important to have views, and they're not being taught that it's important to know what you're talking about.
    It's important to hear the opposite viewpoint, and more important to learn how to distinguish why viewpoint A and viewpoint B are different, and which one has the most evidence or logic behind it. They disregard that. They hear something, they hear some rhetoric, and they run with it.”
    Thomas Sowell

  • #17
    Stephen Arroyo
    “Scientific “facts” are taught at a very early age and in the very same manner in which religious “facts” were taught only a century ago.… But science is excepted from criticism. In society at large the judgment of the scientist is received with the same reverence as the judgment of bishops and cardinals was accepted not too long ago.… science has now become as oppressive as the ideologies it had once to fight. (ibid., p. 182)”
    Stephen Arroyo, Person-to-Person Astrology: Energy Factors in Love, Sex and Compatibility

  • #18
    Roger Scruton
    “Many people under the influence of science, and particularly neuro-nonsense, will say the sacred is an old concept, it’s just a hangover, but you can easily see that’s not so, because everyone has a sense of desecration: there are things everybody values which, when they are spoiled are not just moved or destroyed, they are desecrated. Something that is vital not just to you but the world. People have this sense when they see their towns pulled apart and concrete blocks put in the middle of them. You only have to look at Aberdeen to see what happens to a beautiful place when the desecrators get their hands on it.”
    Roger Scruton, The Soul of the World

  • #19
    Roger Scruton
    “Neuro-nonsense occurs when people take on board the supposed discoveries of neuroscience – all these brain images that tell us, for instance, that we’ve discovered now exactly what love is, it’s this little bit in the hippocampus, so we have no need to question what the meaning of these things is. But these images have no meaning, any more than a chemical reaction in a test-tube has a meaning. All kinds of nonsense comes into being as a result of this, the nonsense being essentially what happens when our own human nature is confiscated from us by science or pseudosciences which claim to explain us without really going into the question of what we are.”
    Roger Scruton, The Soul of the World

  • #20
    C.G. Jung
    “The less we understand of what our fathers and forefathers sought, the less we understand ourselves, and thus we help with all our might to rob the individual of his roots and his guiding instincts, so that he becomes a particle in the mass, ruled only by what Nietzsche called the spirit of gravity.”
    Carl Jung, Memories, Dreams, Reflections

  • #21
    C.G. Jung
    “Who has fully realized that history is not contained in thick books but lives in our very blood?”
    Carl Jung

  • #22
    “Just look at us. Everything is backwards, everything is upside down. Doctors destroy health, lawyers destroy justice, psychiatrists destroy minds, scientists destroy truth, major media destroys information, religions destroy spirituality and governments destroy freedom.”
    Michael Ellner

  • #23
    Erasmus
    “He who allows oppression shares the crime.”
    Desiderius Erasmus Roterodamus

  • #24
    C.G. Jung
    “Nobody can fall so low unless he has a great depth.

    If such a thing can happen to a man, it challenges his best and highest on the other side; that is to say, this depth corresponds to a potential height, and the blackest darkness to a hidden light.”
    C.G. Jung

  • #25
    C.G. Jung
    “No tree, it is said, can grow to heaven unless its roots reach down to hell.”
    Carl Jung

  • #26
    Andrei Tarkovsky
    “My encounter with another world and another culture and the beginnings of an attachment to them had set up an irritation, barely perceptible but incurable-rather like unrequited love, like a symptom of the hopelessness of trying to grasp what is boundless, or unite what cannot be joined; a reminder of how finite, how curtailed, our experience on earth must be”
    Andrei Tarkovsky, Sculpting in Time

  • #27
    Joseph Campbell
    “We're not on our journey to save the world but to save ourselves. But in doing that you save the world. The influence of a vital person vitalizes.”
    Joseph Campbell

  • #28
    Rollo May
    “Every human being must have a point at which he stands against the culture, where he says, this is me and the damned world can go to hell.”
    Rollo May

  • #29
    C.G. Jung
    “Freedom of will is the ability to do gladly that which I must do.”
    Carl Jung

  • #30
    Vernon Howard
    “A truly strong person does not need the approval of others any more than a lion needs the approval of sheep.”
    Vernon Howard



Rss
« previous 1 3 4 5 6 7