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  • Ludwig Wittgenstein
    "Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent."
    Ludwig Wittgenstein (Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus)


  • Ludwig Wittgenstein
    "What is troubling us is the tendency to believe that the mind is like a little man within."
    Ludwig Wittgenstein


  • Ludwig Wittgenstein
    "This sort of thing has got to be stopped. Bad philosophers are like slum landlords. It's my job to put them out of business."
    Ludwig Wittgenstein


  • Robert Graves
    "When the immense drugged universe explodes
    In a cascade of unendurable colour
    And leaves us gasping naked,
    This is no more than the ectasy of chaos:
    Hold fast, with both hands, to that royal love
    Which alone, as we know certainly, restores
    Fragmentation into true being.

    "Ecstasy of Chaos""
    Robert Graves (Poems 1965-1968)


  • John le Carré
    "Coming home from very lonely places, all of us go a little mad: whether from great personal success, or just an all-night drive, we are the sole survivors of a world no one else has ever seen."
    John le Carré


  • Robert Musil
    "What is perceptible to one’s mistrust is the cut-and-dried way that life is divided up and the ready-made form it assumes, the ever-recurring sameness of it, the pre-formations passed down by generation after generation, the ready-made language not only of the tongue but also of the sensations and the feelings. "
    Robert Musil


  • Blaise Pascal
    "It is man's natural sickness to believe that he possesses the Truth."
    Blaise Pascal


  • Michel Foucault
    "The strategic adversary is fascism... the fascism in us all, in our heads and in our everyday behavior, the fascism that causes us to love power, to desire the very thing that dominates and exploits us."
    Michel Foucault


  • Walter Benjamin
    ""It is only for those without hope that hope is given.""
    Walter Benjamin


  • Jean-Paul Sartre
    "Better to die on one's feet than to live on one's knees."
    Jean-Paul Sartre


  • Jean-Paul Sartre
    "When the rich wage war it's the poor who die."
    Jean-Paul Sartre


  • Jean-Paul Sartre
    "We are our choices."
    Jean-Paul Sartre


  • Bertrand Russell
    "Do not fear to be eccentric in opinion, for every opinion now accepted was once eccentric."
    Bertrand Russell


  • Bertrand Russell
    "Of all forms of caution, caution in love is perhaps the most fatal to true happiness."
    Bertrand Russell


  • Bertrand Russell
    "War doesn’t decide who is right, war decides who is left."
    Bertrand Russell


  • Bertrand Russell
    "There is much pleasure to be gained from useless knowledge."
    Bertrand Russell


  • Donald Barthelme
    "The confusing signals, the impurity of the signal, gives you verisimilitude, as when you attend a funeral and notice that it's being poorly done."
    Donald Barthelme (Sixty Stories)


  • Julian Barnes
    "To be stupid, and selfish, and to have good health are the three requirements for happiness - though if stupidity is lacking, the others are useless."
    Julian Barnes (Flaubert's Parrot)


  • Julian Barnes
    "If a man cannot tell what he wants to do, then he must find out what he ought to do. If desire has become complicated, then hold fast to duty."
    Julian Barnes (Arthur and George)


  • "Jazz presumes that it would be nice if the four of us--simpatico dudes that we are--while playing this complicated song together, might somehow be free and autonomous as well. Tragically, this never quite works out. At best, we can only be free one or two at a time--while the other dudes hold onto the wire. Which is not to say that no one has tried to dispense with wires. Many have, and sometimes it works--but it doesn't feel like jazz when it does. The music simply drifts away into the stratosphere of formal dialectic, beyond our social concerns.

    Rock-and-roll, on the other hand, presumes that the four of us--as damaged and anti-social as we are--might possibly get it to-fucking-gether, man, and play this simple song. And play it right, okay? Just this once, in tune and on the beat. But we can't. The song's too simple, and we're too complicated and too excited. We try like hell, but the guitars distort, the intonation bends, and the beat just moves, imperceptibly, against our formal expectations, whetehr we want it to or not. Just because we're breathing, man. Thus, in the process of trying to play this very simple song together, we create this hurricane of noise, this infinitely complicated, fractal filigree of delicate distinctions.

    And you can thank the wanking eighties, if you wish, and digital sequencers, too, for proving to everyone that technologically "perfect" rock--like "free" jazz--sucks rockets. Because order sucks. I mean, look at the Stones. Keith Richards is always on top of the beat, and Bill Wyman, until he quit, was always behind it, because Richards is leading the band and Charlie Watts is listening to him and Wyman is listening to Watts. So the beat is sliding on those tiny neural lapses, not so you can tell, of course, but so you can feel it in your stomach. And the intonation is wavering, too, with the pulse in the finger on the amplified string. This is the delicacy of rock-and-roll, the bodily rhetoric of tiny increments, necessary imperfections, and contingent community. And it has its virtues, because jazz only works if we're trying to be free and are, in fact, together. Rock-and-roll works because we're all a bunch of flakes. That's something you can depend on, and a good thing too, because in the twentieth century, that's all there is: jazz and rock-and-roll. The rest is term papers and advertising."
    Dave Hickey (Air Guitar: Essays on Art & Democracy)


  • "I cannot tell you how many quiet mornings I have spent sitting around hotel rooms and furnished apartments in the United States and Mexico, smoking cigarettes, plunking the guitar, and watching Perry Mason--telling myself, "Well, at least I don't have a day job. And there is nothing wrong with that. I am not guilty of anything. Perry would see that in a minute.""
    Dave Hickey (Air Guitar: Essays on Art & Democracy)


  • Raegan Butcher
    "Prison is like high school--with knives."
    Raegan Butcher


  • "“The greatest threat to freedom is the absence of criticism.”"
    Wole Soyinka


  • Paulo Freire
    "Education either functions as an instrument which is used to facilitate integration of the younger generation into the logic of the present system and bring about conformity or it becomes the practice of freedom, the means by which men and women deal critically and creatively with reality and discover how to participate in the transformation of their world."
    Paulo Freire (Pedagogy of the Oppressed)


  • Franz Kafka
    "You do not need to leave your room. Remain sitting at your table and listen. Do not even listen, simply wait, be quiet, still and solitary. The world will freely offer itself to you to be unmasked, it has no choice, it will roll in ecstasy at your feet."
    Franz Kafka


  • Søren Kierkegaard
    "Anxiety is the dizziness of freedom."
    Søren Kierkegaard


  • Albert Camus
    "Idleness is fatal only to the mediocre."
    Albert Camus


  • Michael Cunningham
    "We'd hoped vaguely to fall in love but hadn't worried much about it, because we'd thought we had all the time in the world. Love had seemed so final and so dull -- love was what ruined our parents. Love had delivered them to a life of mortgage payments and household
    repairs; to unglamorous jobs and the flourescent aisles of a supermarket at two in the afternoon. We'd hoped for love of a different kind, love that knew and forgave our human frailty but did not miniaturize our grander ideas of ourselves. It sounded possible. If we didn't rush or grab, if we didn't panic, a love both challenging and nurturing might appear. If the person was imaginable, then the person could exist."
    Michael Cunningham


  • E.M. Forster
    "Works of art, in my opinion, are the only objects in the material universe to possess internal order, and that is why, though I don't believe that only art matters, I do believe in Art for Art's sake."
    E.M. Forster


  • Ludwig Wittgenstein
    "Philosophy is a battle against the bewitchment of our intelligence by means of language."
    Ludwig Wittgenstein


  • Ludwig Wittgenstein
    "I am sitting with a philosopher in the garden; he says again and again 'I know that that’s a tree', pointing to a tree that is near us. Someone else arrives and hears this, and I tell him: 'This fellow isn’t insane. We are only doing philosophy.'"
    Ludwig Wittgenstein (On Certainty)


  • Ludwig Wittgenstein
    "A picture held us captive. And we could not get outside it, for it lay in our language and language seemed to repeat it to us inexorably."
    Ludwig Wittgenstein (Philosophical Investigations: 50th Anniversary Commemorative Edition)


  • Blaise Pascal
    "A trifle consoles us, for a trifle distresses us."
    Blaise Pascal (Pensees)


  • Blaise Pascal
    "We must keep our thought secret, and judge everything by it, while talking like the people."
    Blaise Pascal (Pensees)


  • Albert Camus
    "Man cannot do without beauty, and this is what our era pretends to want to disregard."
    Albert Camus


  • Walter Benjamin
    "The only way of knowing a person is to love them without hope."
    Walter Benjamin


  • Émile Michel Cioran
    "It is not worth the bother of killing yourself, since you always kill yourself too late."
    Émile Michel Cioran


  • Richard P. Feynman
    "Study hard what interests you the most in the most undisciplined, irreverent and original manner possible."
    Richard P. Feynman


  • Mignon McLaughlin
    "Don't be yourself. Be someone a little nicer."
    Mignon McLaughlin


  • Mignon McLaughlin
    "Men who don't like girls with brains don't like girls."
    Mignon McLaughlin


  • Mignon McLaughlin
    "The best work is done with the heart breaking, or overflowing."
    Mignon McLaughlin


  • Mignon McLaughlin
    "It's innocence when it charms us, ignorance when it doesn't."
    Mignon McLaughlin (Lucky In Love Greeting Card)


  • Mignon McLaughlin
    "No one really listens to anyone else, and if you try it for a while you'll see why."
    Mignon McLaughlin



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