Joe Robberechts

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Filosofie als een...
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Notes from Underg...
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Viktor E. Frankl
“Between stimulus and response there is a space. In that space is our power to choose our response. In our response lies our growth and our freedom.”
Viktor E. Frankl

Theodore Dalrymple
“The loss of the religious understanding of the human condition—that Man is a fallen creature for whom virtue is necessary but never fully attainable—is a loss, not a gain, in true sophistication. The secular substitute—the belief in the perfection of life on earth by the endless extension of a choice of pleasures—is not merely callow by comparison but much less realistic in its understanding of human nature.”
Theodore Dalrymple, Our Culture, What's Left Of It

Theodore Dalrymple
“The primrose path to perdition never ceases to attract. Not least among the attractions of the primrose path are drugs of abuse. This has always been so and will always be so. The temptation to obscure life’s existential difficulties, dissatisfactions, and terrors by means of chemically-induced oblivion has always been, and will always be, great, at least until the meaning of life has been found once and for all.”
Theodore Dalrymple

Santiago Ramón y Cajal
“Great men are at times geniuses, occasionally children, and always incomplete.”
Santiago Ramón y Cajal

Fyodor Dostoevsky
“And that is not all: even if man really were nothing but a piano-key, even if this were proved to him by natural science and mathematics, even then he would not become reasonable, but would purposely do something perverse out of simple ingratitude, simply to gain his point. And if he does not find means he will contrive destruction and chaos, will contrive sufferings of all sorts, only to gain his point! He will launch a curse upon the world, and as only man can curse (it is his privilege's, the primarily distinction between him and other animas), may be by his curse alone he will attain his object- that is, convince himself that he is a man and not a piano key! If you say all this too, can be calculated and tabulated-chaos and darkness and curses, so that the mere possibility of calculating it all beforehand would stop it all, the reason would reassert itself, then man would purposely go mad in order to be rid of reason and gain his point! I believe in it, I answer for it, for the whole work of man really seems to consist in nothing but proving to himself every minute that he is a man and not a piano-key! Good heavens, gentleman, what sort of free will is left when we come to tabulation and arithmetic, when it will all be a case of twice two make four? Twice two makes four without my will. As if free will meant that!”
Fyodor Dostoevsky, Notes from Underground

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