Penultimate Words, and Other Essays Quotes
Penultimate Words, and Other Essays
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Lev Shestov19 ratings, 3.89 average rating, 5 reviews
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Penultimate Words, and Other Essays Quotes
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“Great privations and great illusions so change the nature of man that things which seemed before impossible, become possible, and the unattainable, attainable.”
― Penultimate Words, and Other Essays
― Penultimate Words, and Other Essays
“Tolstoi, and also Socrates and Plato, and the Jewish prophets, who in this respect and in many others were very like the teachers of wisdom, probably had to concentrate their powers wholly upon one gigantic inward task, the condition of its successful performance being the illusion that the whole world, the whole universe, works in concert and unison with them. In Tolstoi's case I have elsewhere shown that he finds himself at present on the brink of Solipsism in his conception of the world. Tolstoi and the whole world are to him synonymous. Without such a temporary delusion of his whole being—it is not an intellectual delusion, of the head, for the head knows well that the world is by itself, and Tolstoi by himself—he would have to give up his most important work. So it is with us, who know since Copernicus that the earth moves round the sun, that the stars are not clear, bright, golden rings, but huge lumps of various composition, that there is not a firm blue vault overhead. We know these things: nevertheless we cannot and do not want to be so blind as not to take delight in the lie of the optical illusions of the visible world. Truth so-called has but a limited value. Nor does the sacrifice of Galileo by any means refute my words. E pur si muove, if ever he uttered the phrase, might not have referred to the movement of the earth, though it was spoken of the earth.”
― Penultimate Words and Other Essays (1916) [Leather Bound]
― Penultimate Words and Other Essays (1916) [Leather Bound]
