Mitchell > Mitchell's Quotes

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  • #1
    Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
    “When liberty is mentioned, we must always be careful to observe whether it is not really the assertion of private interests which is thereby designated.”
    Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel

  • #2
    C.G. Jung
    “It is often tragic to see how blatantly a man bungles his own life and the lives of others yet remains totally incapable of seeing how much the whole tragedy originates in himself, and how he continually feeds it and keeps it going. Not consciously, of course—for consciously he is engaged in bewailing and cursing a faithless world that recedes further and further into the distance. Rather, it is an unconscious factor which spins the illusions that veil his world. And what is being spun is a cocoon, which in the end will completely envelop him.”
    C.G. Jung, Aion

  • #3
    Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling
    “That which Dante saw written on the door of the inferno must be written in a different sense also at the entrance to philosophy: “Abandon all hope, ye who enter here.” Those who look for true philosophy must be bereft of all hope, all desire, all longing. They must not wish for anything, not know anything, must feel completely bare and impoverished.”
    Friedrich Schelling

  • #4
    Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling
    “Far from it being true that man and his activity makes the world comprehensible, he is himself the most incomprehensible of all, and drives me relentlessly to the view of the accursedness of all being, a view manifested in so many painful signs in ancient and modern times. It is precisely man who drives me to the final despairing question: Why is there something? Why not nothing?”
    Friedrich Schelling

  • #5
    Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling
    “This is not the time to reawaken old oppositions, but rather to seek what lies above and beyond all opposition.”
    Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling

  • #6
    Michael Shermer
    “As Karl Marx once noted: 'Hegel remarks somewhere that all great, world-historical facts and personages occur, as it were, twice. He forgot to add: the first time as tragedy, the second as farce.' William Jennings Bryan and the Scopes trial was a tragedy. The creationists and intelligent design theorists are a farce.”
    Michael Shermer

  • #7
    Francis Fukuyama
    “For Hegel, by contrast, liberal society is a reciprocal and equal agreement among citizens to mutually recognize each other”
    Francis Fukuyama, The End of History and the Last Man

  • #8
    Jürgen Habermas
    “[Jürgen Habermas' obituary to friend and philosopher, Richard Rorty]

    One small autobiographical piece by Rorty bears the title 'Wild Orchids and Trotsky.' In it, Rorty describes how as a youth he ambled around the blooming hillside in north-west New Jersey, and breathed in the stunning odour of the orchids. Around the same time he discovered a fascinating book at the home of his leftist parents, defending Leon Trotsky against Stalin. This was the origin of the vision that the young Rorty took with him to college: philosophy is there to reconcile the celestial beauty of orchids with Trotsky's dream of justice on earth. Nothing is sacred to Rorty the ironist. Asked at the end of his life about the 'holy', the strict atheist answered with words reminiscent of the young Hegel: 'My sense of the holy is bound up with the hope that some day my remote descendants will live in a global civilization in which love is pretty much the only law.”
    Jürgen Habermas

  • #9
    Alexander Pope
    “Vice is a monster of so frightful mien
    As to be hated needs but to be seen;
    Yet seen too oft, familiar with her face,
    We first endure, then pity, then embrace.”
    Alexander Pope

  • #10
    Robert Anton Wilson
    G.W.F. Hegel. "He's perfect," Weishaupt wrote.... "Unlike Kant, who makes sense only in German, this man doesn't make sense in any language.”
    Robert Anton Wilson, Leviathan

  • #11
    Anthony Bourdain
    “Once you’ve been to Cambodia, you’ll never stop wanting to beat Henry Kissinger to death with your bare hands. You will never again be able to open a newspaper and read about that treacherous, prevaricating, murderous scumbag sitting down for a nice chat with Charlie Rose or attending some black-tie affair for a new glossy magazine without choking. Witness what Henry did in Cambodia – the fruits of his genius for statesmanship – and you will never understand why he’s not sitting in the dock at The Hague next to Milošević.”
    Anthony Bourdain



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