Seth > Seth's Quotes

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  • #1
    Jorge Luis Borges
    “The library will endure; it is the universe. As for us, everything has not been written; we are not turning into phantoms. We walk the corridors, searching the shelves and rearranging them, looking for lines of meaning amid leagues of cacophony and incoherence, reading the history of the past and our future, collecting our thoughts and collecting the thoughts of others, and every so often glimpsing mirrors, in which we may recognize creatures of the information.”
    Jorge Luis Borges, The Library of Babel

  • #2
    Bertrand Russell
    “The secret of happiness is very simply this: let your interests be as wide as possible, and let your reactions to the things and persons that interest you be as far as possible friendly rather than hostile”
    Bertrand Russell, The Conquest of Happiness

  • #3
    Bertrand Russell
    “Having made the decision, do not revise it unless some new fact comes to your knowledge. Nothing is so exhausting as indecision, and nothing is so futile.”
    Bertrand Russell, The Conquest of Happiness

  • #4
    Bertrand Russell
    “To the primitive mind, everything is either friendly or hostile; but experience has shown that friendliness and hostility are not the conceptions by which the world is to be understood.”
    Bertrand Russell, Mysticism and Logic

  • #5
    Jorge Luis Borges
    “It also occurred to him that throughout history, humankind has told two stories: the story of a lost ship sailing the Mediterranean seas in quest of a beloved isle, and the story of a god who allows himself to be crucified on Golgotha.”
    Jorge Luis Borges, Collected Fictions

  • #6
    Jorge Luis Borges
    “As the end approaches, there are no longer any images from memory - there are only words.”
    Jorge Luis Borges, Collected Fictions

  • #7
    Jorge Luis Borges
    “A writer, or any man, must believe that whatever happens to him is an instrument; everything has been given for an end. This is even stronger in the case of the artist. Everything that happens, including humiliations, embarrassments, misfortunes, all has been given like clay, like material for one’s art. One must accept it. For this reason I speak in a poem of the ancient food of heroes: humiliation, unhappiness, discord. Those things are given to us to transform, so that we may make from the miserable circumstances of our lives things that are eternal, or aspire to be so.”
    Jorge Luis Borges, Selected Non-Fictions

  • #8
    Albert Einstein
    “Be a loner. That gives you time to wonder, to search for the truth. Have holy curiosity. Make your life worth living.”
    Albert Einstein

  • #9
    Voltaire
    “But for what purpose was the earth formed?" asked Candide. "To drive us mad," replied Martin.”
    Voltaire, Candide

  • #10
    Hunter S. Thompson
    “I had come to regard him as a loner with no real past and a future so vague that there was no sense talking about it.”
    Hunter S. Thompson, The Rum Diary

  • #11
    Charles Bukowski
    “You get so alone at times that it just makes sense.”
    Charles Bukowski

  • #12
    Lewis Carroll
    “People who don't think shouldn't talk.”
    Lewis Carroll

  • #13
    Leo Tolstoy
    “Am I mad, to see what others do not see, or are they mad who are responsible for all that I am seeing?”
    Leo Tolstoy

  • #14
    Albert Einstein
    “Although I am a typical loner in my daily life, my awareness of belonging to the invisible community of those who strive for truth, beauty, and justice has prevented me from feelings of isolation.”
    Albert Einstein

  • #15
    Albert Einstein
    “It is a special blessing to belong among those who can and may devote their best energies to the contemplation and exploration of objective and timeless things. How happy and grateful I am for having been granted this blessing, which bestows upon one a large measure of independence from one's personal fate and from the attitude of one's contemporaries. Yet this independence must not inure us to the awareness of the duties that constantly bind us to the past, present and future of humankind at large.

    Our situation on this earth seems strange. Every one of us appears here, involuntarily and uninvited, for a short stay, without knowing the why and the wherefore. In our daily lives we feel only that man is here for the sake of others, for those whom we love and for many other beings whose fate is connected with our own.

    I am often troubled by the thought that my life is based to such a large extent on the work of my fellow human beings, and I am aware of my great indebtedness to them.

    I do not believe in free will. Schopenhauer's words: 'Man can do what he wants, but he cannot will what he wills,' accompany me in all situations throughout my life and reconcile me with the actions of others, even if they are rather painful to me. This awareness of the lack of free will keeps me from taking myself and my fellow men too seriously as acting and deciding individuals, and from losing my temper.

    I have never coveted affluence and luxury and even despise them a good deal. My passion for social justice has often brought me into conflict with people, as has my aversion to any obligation and dependence I did not regard as absolutely necessary.

    [Part 2]
    I have a high regard for the individual and an insuperable distaste for violence and fanaticism. All these motives have made me a passionate pacifist and antimilitarist. I am against any chauvinism, even in the guise of mere patriotism.

    Privileges based on position and property have always seemed to me unjust and pernicious, as does any exaggerated personality cult. I am an adherent of the ideal of democracy, although I know well the weaknesses of the democratic form of government. Social equality and economic protection of the individual have always seemed to me the important communal aims of the state.

    Although I am a typical loner in daily life, my consciousness of belonging to the invisible community of those who strive for truth, beauty, and justice keeps me from feeling isolated.

    The most beautiful and deepest experience a man can have is the sense of the mysterious. It is the underlying principle of religion as well as of all serious endeavour in art and science. He who never had this experience seems to me, if not dead, then at least blind. To sense that behind anything that can be experienced there is a something that our minds cannot grasp, whose beauty and sublimity reaches us only indirectly: this is religiousness. In this sense I am religious. To me it suffices to wonder at these secrets and to attempt humbly to grasp with my mind a mere image of the lofty structure of all there is.”
    Albert Einstein

  • #16
    Rainer Maria Rilke
    “Whenever one speaks of lonely people one takes too much for granted. One thinks people all know what they're dealing with. No, they do not. They've never seen a lonely person, they've simply hated him without knowing him. They've been his neighbours who've used him up, they were the voices in the next room who tempted him. They roused things up against him, getting them to make a din and drown him out. Children ganged up against him when he was a tender child, and at every stage of his growing up he grew hostile to grown-ups . They tracked him to his hiding-place like an animal of chase and throughout his long youth there was no closed season. And when he didn't allow himself to be worn out so that he got away they yelled about what came forth from him and called it ugly and were suspicious of it. And as he didn't stop they grew more obvious and gobbled up his food and breathed up his air and spat into his poverty so that he himself became disgusted at it. They brought him into disrepute as if he were a contagion and threw stones at him to speed his departure. And they were right to follow their age-old instinct: because he really was their enemy. But then when he didn't look up they had second thoughts. They suspected that in all of this they had acted as he had willed them to act; they had strengthened him in his solitude and had helped him separate himself from them for ever.”
    Rainer Maria Rilke

  • #17
    Henry Miller
    “I need to be alone. I need to ponder my shame and my despair in seclusion; I need the sunshine and the paving stones of the streets without companions, without conversation, face to face with myself, with only the music of my heart for company.”
    Henry Miller, Tropic of Cancer

  • #18
    Plato
    “The first and greatest victory is to conquer yourself; to be conquered by yourself is of all things most shameful and vile.”
    Plato, The Laws of Plato

  • #19
    Franz Kafka
    “I think we ought to read only the kind of books that wound and stab us. If the book we’re reading doesn’t wake us up with a blow on the head, what are we reading it for?”
    Franz Kafka, Letters to Friends, Family, and Editors

  • #20
    Umberto Eco
    “We stopped to browse in the cases, and now that William - with his new glasses on his nose - could linger and read the books, at every title he discovered he let out exclamations of happiness, either because he knew the work, or because he had been seeking it for a long time, or finally because he had never heard it mentioned and was highly excited and titillated. In short, for him every book was like a fabulous animal that he was meeting in a strange land.”
    Umberto Eco, The Name of the Rose

  • #21
    Walter Benjamin
    “Let no thought pass incognito, and keep your notebook as strictly as the authorities keep their register of aliens.”
    Walter Benjamin

  • #22
    “The world belongs to those who read.”
    Rick Holland

  • #23
    Nicholas A. Basbanes
    “With thought, patience, and discrimination, book passion becomes the signature of a person's character. ”
    Nicholas A. Basbanes, A Gentle Madness: Bibliophiles, Bibliomanes and the Eternal Passion for Books

  • #24
    Allen Ginsberg
    “No rest
    without love,
    No sleep
    without dreams
    of love -
    be mad or chill
    obsessed with angels
    or machines
    the final wish
    is love.”
    Allen Ginsberg, Howl and Other Poems

  • #25
    Roland Barthes
    “The text, in its mass, is comparable to a sky, at once flat and smooth, deep, without edges and without landmarks; like the soothsayer drawing on it with the tip of his staff an imaginary rectangle wherein to consult, according to certain principles, the flight of birds, the commentator traces through the text certain zones of reading, in order to observe therein the migration of meanings, the outcropping of codes, the passage of citations.”
    Roland Barthes, S/Z: An Essay

  • #26
    Roland Barthes
    “Meanings can indeed be forgotten, but only if we have chosen to bring to bear upon the text a singular scrutiny. Yet reading does not consist in stopping the chain of systems, in establishing a truth, a legality of the text, and consequently in leading its reader into "errors"; it consists in coupling these systems, not according to their finite quantity, but according to their plurality (which is a being, not a discounting): I pass, I intersect, I articulate, I release, I do not count. Forgetting meanings is not a matter for excuses, an unfortunate defect in performance; it is an affirmative value, a way of asserting the irresponsibility of the text, the pluralism of systems (if I closed their list, I would inevitably reconstitute a singular, theological meaning): it is precisely because I forget that I read.”
    Roland Barthes, S/Z: An Essay

  • #27
    Franz Kafka
    “You spend too much time on ephemeras. The majority of modern books are merely wavering reflections of the present. They disappear very quickly. You should read more old books. The classics. Goethe. What is merely new is the most transitory of all things. It is beautiful today, and tomorrow merely ludicrous.”
    Franz Kafka

  • #28
    Irvin D. Yalom
    “It is easier, far easier, to obey another than to command oneself.”
    Irvin D. Yalom, When Nietzsche Wept

  • #29
    Irvin D. Yalom
    “Live right, he reminded himself, and have faith that good things will flow from you even if you never learn of them.”
    Irvin D. Yalom, The Schopenhauer Cure

  • #30
    Irvin D. Yalom
    “Life is a miserable thing. I have decided to spend my life thinking about it.”
    Irvin D. Yalom, The Schopenhauer Cure



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