Meysamsafari1991 > Meysamsafari1991's Quotes

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  • #1
    Søren Kierkegaard
    “Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived forwards.”
    Søren Kierkegaard

  • #2
    Siddhartha Mukherjee
    “Like musicians, like mathematicians—like elite athletes—scientists peak early and dwindle fast. It isn’t creativity that fades, but stamina: science is an endurance sport. To produce that single illuminating experiment, a thousand nonilluminating experiments have to be sent into the trash; it is battle between nature and nerve. Avery”
    Siddhartha Mukherjee, The Gene: An Intimate History

  • #3
    Siddhartha Mukherjee
    “Seek simplicity, but distrust it,” Alfred North Whitehead, the mathematician and philosopher, once advised his students. Dobzhansky”
    Siddhartha Mukherjee, The Gene: An Intimate History

  • #4
    Siddhartha Mukherjee
    “History repeats itself, in part because the genome repeats itself. And the genome repeats itself, in part because history does. The impulses, ambitions, fantasies, and desires that drive human history are, at least in part, encoded in the human genome. And human history has, in turn, selected genomes that carry these impulses, ambitions, fantasies, and desires. This self-fulfilling circle of logic is responsible for some of the most magnificent and evocative qualities in our species, but also some of the most reprehensible. It is far too much to ask ourselves to escape the orbit of this logic, but recognizing its inherent circularity, and being skeptical of its overreach, might protect the week from the will of the strong, and the 'mutant' from being annihilated by the 'normal'.”
    Siddhartha Mukherjee, The Gene: An Intimate History

  • #5
    Matt Ridley
    “TP53 seems to encode the greater good, like a suicide pill in the mouth of a soldier that dissolves only when it detects evidence that he is about to mutiny.”
    Matt Ridley, Genome: The Autobiography of a Species in 23 Chapters

  • #6
    Erich Fromm
    “A person who has not been completely alienated, who has remained sensitive and able to feel, who has not lost the sense of dignity, who is not yet "for sale", who can still suffer over the suffering of others, who has not acquired fully the having mode of existence - briefly, a person who has remained a person and not become a thing - cannot help feeling lonely, powerless, isolated in present-day society. He cannot help doubting himself and his own convictions, if not his sanity. He cannot help suffering, even though he can experience moments of joy and clarity that are absent in the life of his "normal" contemporaries. Not rarely will he suffer from neurosis that results from the situation of a sane man living in an insane society, rather than that of the more conventional neurosis of a sick man trying to adapt himself to a sick society. In the process of going further in his analysis, i.e. of growing to greater independence and productivity,his neurotic symptoms will cure themselves.”
    Erich fromm, The Art of Being

  • #7
    Wilhelm Reich
    “Only the liberation of the natural capacity for love in human beings can master their sadistic destructiveness.”
    Wilhelm Reich

  • #8
    Gilles Deleuze
    “The fundamental problem of political philosophy is still precisely the one that Spinoza saw so clearly (and that Wilhelm Reich rediscovered): Why do men fight for their servitude as stubbornly as though it were their salvation?”
    Gilles Deleuze, Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia

  • #9
    Michel Foucault
    “Do not think that one has to be sad in order to be militant, even though the thing one is fighting is abominable.”
    Michel Foucault, Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia

  • #10
    Gilles Deleuze
    “Making love is not just becoming as one, or even two, but becoming as a hundred thousand. Desiring-machines or the nonhuman sex: not one or even two sexes, but n sexes.”
    Gilles Deleuze, Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia

  • #11
    Gilles Deleuze
    “Psychoanalysis was from the start, still is, and perhaps always will be a well-constituted church and a form of treatment based on a set of beliefs that only the very faithful could adhere to, i.e., those who believe in a security that amounts to being lost in the herd and defined in terms of common and external goals”
    Gilles Deleuze, Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia

  • #12
    “[W]e are basically more similar to our patients than we are different from them. The psychological mechanisms in pathological states are merely extensions of principles involved in normal developmental functioning. Doctor and patient are both human beings. [...] [C]ountertransference in the psychiatrist and transference in the patient are essentially identical processes - each unconsciously experiences the other as someone from the past.”
    Glen O. Gabbard, Psychodynamic Psychiatry in Clinical Practice

  • #13
    Sigmund Freud
    “When a love-relationship is at its height there is no room left for any interest in the environment; a pair of lovers are sufficient to themselves”
    Sigmund Freud, Civilization and Its Discontents

  • #14
    Megan Chance
    “In the end, there's only one thing you can believe. Bodies are honest; they don't lie.”
    Megan Chance, The Spiritualist

  • #15
    Herbert Marcuse
    “If the worker and his boss enjoy the same television program and visit the same resort places, if the typist is as attractively made up as the daughter of her employer, if the Negro owns a Cadillac, if they all read the same newspaper, then this assimilation indicates not the disappearance of classes, but the extent to which the needs and satisfactions that serve the preservation of the Establishment are shared by the underlying population.”
    Herbert Marcuse, One-Dimensional Man: Studies in the Ideology of Advanced Industrial Society

  • #16
    Herbert Marcuse
    “One-dimensional thought is systematically promoted by the makers of politics and their purveyors of mass information. Their universe of discourse is populated by self-validating hypotheses which, incessantly and monopolistically repeated, become hyponotic definitions of dictations.”
    Herbert Marcuse, One-Dimensional Man: Studies in the Ideology of Advanced Industrial Society



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