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Julian > Julian's Quotes

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  • #1
    Emil M. Cioran
    “If truth were not boring, science would have done away with God long ago. But God as well as the saints is a means to escape the dull banality of truth.”
    Emil Cioran, Tears and Saints

  • #2
    Emil M. Cioran
    “Only optimists commit suicide, optimists who no longer succeed at being optimists. The others, having no reason to live, why would they have any to die?”
    Emil Cioran

  • #3
    Emil M. Cioran
    “Write books only if you are going to say in them the things you would never dare confide to anyone.”
    Emil Cioran

  • #4
    Emil M. Cioran
    “The fact that life has no meaning is a reason to live --moreover, the only one.”
    E. M. Cioran

  • #5
    Emil M. Cioran
    “Is it possible that existence is our exile and nothingness our home?”
    Emil Cioran, Tears and Saints

  • #6
    Emil M. Cioran
    “If we could truly see ourselves the way others see us we'd disappear on the spot.”
    Émile Michel Cioran

  • #7
    Emil M. Cioran
    “Do I look like someone who has something to do here on earth?' —That's what I'd like to answer the busybodies who inquire into my activities.”
    Emil Cioran, The Trouble With Being Born

  • #8
    Emil M. Cioran
    “Sometimes I wish I were a cannibal � less for the pleasure of eating someone than for the pleasure of vomiting him.”
    Emil Cioran, The Trouble With Being Born

  • #9
    Emil M. Cioran
    “Only those are happy who never think or, rather, who only think about life's bare necessities, and to think about such things means not to think at all. True thinking resembles a demon who muddies the spring of life or a sickness which corrupts its roots. To think all the time, to raise questions, to doubt your own destiny, to feel the weariness of living, to be worn out to the point of exhaustion by thoughts and life, to leave behind you, as symbols of your life's drama, a trail of smoke and blood - all this means you are so unhappy that reflection and thinking appear as a curse causing a violent revulsion in you.”
    Emil Cioran, On the Heights of Despair

  • #10
    Emil M. Cioran
    “The multiplication of our kind borders on the obscene; the duty to love them, on the preposterous.”
    Emil Cioran

  • #11
    Emil M. Cioran
    “Revenge is not always sweet, once it is consummated we feel inferior to our victim.”
    Emil Cioran

  • #12
    Emil M. Cioran
    “There was a time when time did not yet exist. � The rejection of birth is nothing but the nostalgia for this time before time.”
    Emil Cioran, The Trouble With Being Born

  • #13
    Emil M. Cioran
    “For animals, life is all there is; for man, life is a question mark. An irreversible question mark, for man has never found, nor will ever find, any answers. Life not only has no meaning; it can never have one.”
    Emil Cioran, On the Heights of Despair

  • #14
    Emil M. Cioran
    “What would happen if a man's face could adequately express his suffering, if his entire inner agony would be objectified in his facial expression? Could we still communicate? Wouldn't we then cover our faces with our hands while talking? Life would really be impossible if the infinitude of feelings we harbor within ourselves would be fully expressed in the lines of our face. Nobody would dare look at himself in the mirror, because a grotesque, tragic image would mix in the contours of his face with stains and traces of blood, wounds which cannot be healed, and unstoppable streams of tears. I would experience a kind of voluptuous awe if I could see a volcano of blood, eruptions as red as fire and as burning as despair, burst into the comfortable and superficial harmony of everyday life, or if I could see all our hidden wounds open, making of us a bloody eruption forever. Only then would be truly understand and appreciate the advantages of loneliness, which silences our suffering and makes it inaccessible. The venom drawn out from suffering would be enough to poison the whole world in a bloody eruption, bursting out of the volcano of our being. There is so much venom, so much poison, in suffering!”
    Emil Cioran, On the Heights of Despair

  • #15
    Jalal ad-Din Muhammad ar-Rumi
    “Lovers find secret places
    inside this violent world
    where they make transactions
    with beauty.”
    Rumi

  • #16
    Ralph Waldo Emerson
    “To be yourself in a world that is constantly trying to make you something else is the greatest accomplishment.”
    Ralph Waldo Emerson

  • #17
    “Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.”
    Theodore Roosevelt

  • #18
    “We are the Overcomers, the Overmen, not the Last Men. The Last Men want a petty, trivial, comfortable world without any suffering. Fuck ‘em! The task is not to eliminate suffering, but to sublimate it. All people who accomplish anything great impose tremendous discipline, suffering, and hardship on themselves. They deny themselves an easy, hedonistic life. They train hard, study hard, try hard, make tremendous sacrifices. They’re certainly not in the Last Man game of removing suffering from their life. They don’t want to end suffering. They want to use suffering to develop.”
    David Sinclair, The Wolf Tamers: How They Made the Strong Weak

  • #19
    C.G. Jung
    “As Nietzsche remarked, where pride is insistent enough, memory prefers to give way. Thus, among the lost memories, we encounter not a few that owe their subliminal state (and there incapacity to be voluntary reproduced) to their disagreeable and incompatible nature. The psychologist calls these repressed contents.”
    Carl G. Jung, Man and His Symbols

  • #20
    “When Nietzsche said, “God is dead�, he himself immediately replaced God with a new God, the Superman. Who would bother with Nietzsche’s philosophy if he pronounced God dead and then hanged himself? Nietzsche immediately resurrected God, hence God was never dead. God is always ready to be re-expressed. It’s not the concept of God that’s wrong, it’s the concept of the wrong God, wrongly defined and understood.”
    David Sinclair, The Wolf Tamers: How They Made the Strong Weak

  • #21
    “The Ignavi were damned because they couldn’t choose any side other than their own. Even worse, perhaps, is the person who chooses a side that isn’t his own just to please someone he likes, just to generally 'signal his virtue'. Nietzsche despised virtue signalers and humble braggers. He thought they had no virtue at all and were actually self-serving narcissists trying to get their own way. He provocatively referred to himself as the first immoralist, but, really, he believed that all moralists were the true immoralists since their morality was never anything other than disguised and highly polished self-interest. There was nothing moral about it.”
    David Sinclair, Without the Mob, There Is No Circus

  • #22
    “Superheroes are just Jesus Christ with a penchant for extreme violence (i.e., Jesus Christ perfected by the Second Amendment!). To enjoy a superhero movie, you already need to be ninety percent Christian in your basic worldview.”
    David Sinclair, Lucid Sex: Revolutionize Your Sex Life

  • #23
    “Superheroes are the story of America. They are the means America uses to tell its story, and it sees itself as the ultimate superhero. America is the most mythical country in the world because, ironically, it has the least myths of its own. America isn’t an inventive country, it’s a re-inventive country. It’s always stealing from everywhere else and repurposing it. Why is Hollywood in the USA and not in Europe? It’s because America is a laboratory for reinventing and representing old stories, for continually mythologizing itself, in order to establish for itself a set of myths such as other, much more historical nations, have naturally. But America is now running out of stories, and is plundering its own stories that it has already told so often. How many times do we need to see Spiderman’s Origin Story, or Superman’s, or Batman’s? The same old material is being endlessly recycled. America has run out of stories, and that’s why it’s going into a steep decline. It can’t inflate itself any more. The wells of its imagination have run dry.”
    David Sinclair, Superheroes and Presidents: How Absurd Stories Have Poisoned the American Mind

  • #24
    Ilya Prigogine
    “if Prigogine and Stengers are right and chance plays its role at or near the point of bifurcation, after which deterministic processes take over once more until the next bifurcation, are they not embedding chance, itself, within a deterministic framework? By assigning a particular role to chance, don’t they de-chance it?”
    Ilya Prigogine, Order Out of Chaos: Man's New Dialogue with Nature

  • #25
    Friedrich Nietzsche
    “The fact that humanity knelt down before the opposite of the origin, the meaning, the right of the evangel, the fact that in the concept of ‘church�, humanity canonized the very thing the ‘bearer of glad tidings� felt to be beneath him, behind him - you will not find a greater example of world-historical irony - -”
    Friedrich Nietzsche, The Anti-Christ

  • #26
    Simone Weil
    “Monotony is the most beautiful or the most atrocious thing. The most beautiful if it is a reflection of eternity--the most atrocious if it is the sign of an unvarying perpetuity. It is time surpassed or time sterilized.”
    Simone Weil, Gravity and Grace

  • #27
    Simone Weil
    “Let us not think that because we are less brutal, less violent, less inhuman than our opponents we will carry the day. Brutality, violence and inhumanity have an immense prestige that schoolbooks hide from children, that grown men do not admit, but that everybody bows before. For the opposite virtues to have as much prestige, they must be actively and constantly put into practice. Anyone who is merely incapable of being as brutal, as violent and as inhuman as someone else but who does not practice the opposite virtues, is inferior to that person in both inner strength and prestige, and he will not hold out in such a confrontation.�

    Simone Weil”
    Simone Weil

  • #28
    Simone Weil
    “There should not be the slightest discrepancy between one’s beliefs and one’s way of life.”
    Simone Weil

  • #29
    Simone Weil
    “I also like to think that after the slight shock of separation you will not feel any sorrow � and that if you should sometimes happen to think of me you will do so as one thinks of a book one read in childhood. I do not want ever to occupy a different place from that in the hearts of those I love, because then I can be sure of never causing them any unhappiness.”
    Simone Weil

  • #30
    Simone Weil
    “God alone is capable of loving God. We can only consent to give up our own feelings so as to allow free passage in our soul for this love. That is the meaning of denying oneself. We are created for this consent, and for this alone.”
    Simone Weil, Love in the Void: Where God Finds Us



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