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What are you favorite philosophical and political quotes?

Polynomial

Bluelighter
Joined
Dec 19, 2011
Messages
54
Location
Calgary, Alberta
I've created this thread to share some of my favorite quotes.

  • Please share some of your own favorites!
  • Please list the author of your quotes.
  • Add a personal analysis if you wish!

William S. Burroughs
"After one look at this planet any visitor from outer space would say 'I want to see the manager."

"Hustlers of the world, there is one mark you cannot beat: the mark inside."

"I am not one of those weak-spirited, sappy [people] who want to be liked by all the people around them. I don’t care if people hate my guts; I assume most of them do. The important question is whether they are in a position to do anything about it. My affections, being concentrated over a few people, are not spread all over Hell in a vile attempt to placate sulky, worthless shits."

"The face of 'evil' is always the face of total need."

"Nothing exists until or unless it is observed. An artist is making something exist by observing it. And his hope for other people is that they will also make it exist by observing it. I call it 'creative observation.' Creative viewing."

"Every man has inside himself a parasitic being who is acting not at all to his advantage."

"Danger is a biologic necessity, like dreams. if you face death, for that time, for the period of
direct confrontation, you are immortal."

"Nothing is True, Everything is Permitted"

"Did I ever tell you about the man
who taught his asshole to talk?
His whole abdomen would move up and down,
you dig, farting out the words.
It was unlike anything I ever heard.
Bubbly, thick, stagnant sound.
A sound you could smell.
This man worked for the carnival,you dig?
And to start with it was
like a novelty ventriloquist act.
After a while,
the ass started talking on its own.
He would go in
without anything prepared...
and his ass would ad-lib
and toss the gags back at him every time.
Then it developed sort of teethlike...
little raspy incurving hooks
and started eating.
He thought this was cute at first
and built an act around it...
but the asshole would eat its way through
his pants and start talking on the street...
shouting out it wanted equal rights.
It would get drunk, too, and have crying jags.
Nobody loved it.
And it wanted to be kissed,
same as any other mouth.
Finally, it talked all the time,
day and night.
You could hear him for blocks,
screaming at it to shut up...
beating at it with his fists...
and sticking candles up it, but...
nothing did any good,
and the asshole said to him...
"It is you who will shut up
in the end, not me...
because we don't need you
around here anymore.
I can talk and eat and shit."

After that, he began waking up
in the morning with transparent jelly...
like a tadpole's tail
all over his mouth.
He would tear it off his mouth
and the pieces would stick to his hands...
like burning gasoline jelly
and grow there.
So, finally, his mouth sealed over...
and the whole head...
would have amputated spontaneously
except for the eyes, you dig?
That's the one thing
that the asshole couldn't do was see.
It needed the eyes.
Nerve connections were blocked...
and infiltrated and atrophied.
So, the brain couldn't
give orders anymore.
It was trapped inside the skull...
sealed off.
For a while, you could see...
the silent, helpless suffering
of the brain behind the eyes.
And then finally
the brain must have died...
because the eyes went out...
and there was no more feeling in them
than a crab's eye at the end of a stalk."

"This is a war universe. War all the time. That is its nature. There may be other universes based on all sorts of other principles, but ours seems to be based on war and games. All games are basically hostile. Winners and losers. We see them all around us: the winners and the losers. The losers can oftentimes become winners, and the winners can very easily become losers."

"Most of the trouble in this world has been caused by folks who can't mind their own business, because they have no business of their own to mind, any more than a smallpox virus has."

"If you consider any set of data without a preconceived viewpoint, then a viewpoint will emerge from the data."

"After a shooting spree, they always want to take the guns away from the people who didn't do it. I sure as hell wouldn't want to live in a society where the only people allowed guns are the police and the military."

“If you wish to alter or annihilate a pyramid of numbers in a serial relation, you alter or remove the bottom number. If we wish to annihilate the junk pyramid, we must start with the bottom of the pyramid: the Addict in the Street, and stop tilting quixotically for the "higher ups" so called, all of whom are immediately replaceable. The addict in the street who must have junk to live is the one irreplaceable factor in the junk equation. When there are no more addicts to buy junk there will be no junk traffic. As long as junk need exists, someone will service it."

"While in general I avoid the use of torture - torture locates the opponent and mobilizes resistance - the threat of torture is useful to induce in the subject the appropriate feeling of helplessness and gratitude to the interrogator for withholding it. And torture can be employed to advantage as a penalty when the subject is far enough along with the treatment to accept punishment as deserved. To this end I devised several forms of disciplinary procedure. One was known as the Switchboard. Electric drills that can be turned on at any time are clamped against the subject's teeth; and he is instructed to operate an arbitrary switchboard, to put certain connections in certain sockets in response to bells and lights. Every time he makes a mistake the drills are turned on for twenty seconds. The signals are gradually speeded up beyond his reaction time. Half an hour on the Switchboard and the subject breaks down like an overloaded thinking machine."

“Be just and if you can't be just be arbitrary."

System of a Down
"Stupid people do stupid things, smart people outsmart eachother, then themselves" (Ddevil)

"Presence sponsored fear Batallions of riot police With rubber bullet kisses Baton courtesies Service with a smile Beyond the staples center you can see America With it's tired poor avenging disgrace Peaceful loving youth against the brutality Of plastic existence" (Deer Dance)

"Life is a waterfall We're one in the river And one again after the fall Swimming through the void We hear the word We lose ourselves But we find it all..." (Aerials)

Dalai Lama
"If you can, help others; if you cannot do that, at least do not harm them."

"In the practice of tolerance, one's enemy is the best teacher."

"The purpose of our lives is to be happy."

Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj "We are the creators and creatures of each other,
causing and bearing each other's burden."

"I find that somehow, by shifting the focus of attention, I become the very
thing I look at, and experience the kind of consciousness it has; I become
the inner witness of the thing. I call this capacity of entering other
focal points of consciousness, love; you may give it any name you like.
Love says "I am everything". Wisdom says "I am nothing". Between the two,
my life flows. Since at any point of time and space I can be both the
subject and the object of experience, I express it by saying that I am
both, and neither, and beyond both."

"Unless you make tremendous efforts, you will not be convinced that
effort will take you nowhere. The self is so self-confident that
unless it is totally discouraged it will not give up. Mere verbal
conviction is not enough. Hard facts alone can show the absolute
nothingness of the self-image."

"A quiet mind is all you need. All else will happen rightly, once your
mind is quiet. As the sun on rising makes the world active, so does
self-awareness affect changes in the mind. In the light of calm and
steady self-awareness, inner energies wake up and work miracles
without any effort on your part."

"The world is like a sheet of paper on which something is typed. The
reading and the meaning will vary with the reader, but the paper is
the common factor, always present, rarely perceived. When the ribbon
is removed, typing leaves no trace on the paper. So is my mind - the
impressions keep on coming, but no trace is left."

"When you demand nothing of the world, nor of God, when you want nothing,
seek nothing, expect nothing, then the Supreme State will come to you
uninvited and unexpected."

"All that a guru can tell you is:
My dear Sir, you are quite mistaken about yourself.
You are not the person you take yourself to be."

"There is no such thing as a person.
There are only restrictions and limitations.
The sum total of these defines the person. (...)
The person merely appears to be, like
the space within the pot appears to have the shape and volume
and smell of the pot"

"To expound and propogate concepts is simple,
to drop all concepts is difficult and rare"

"The consciousness in you and the consciousness in me, apparently two, really
one, seek unity and that is love."

"Pleasure puts you to sleep and pain wakes you up. If you don't
want to suffer, don't go to sleep."

To Write Love on her Arms - (The Story by Jamie Tworkowski)
"Pedro the Lion is loud in the speakers, and the city waits just outside our open windows. She sits and sings, legs crossed in the passenger seat, her pretty voice hiding in the volume. Music is a safe place and Pedro is her favorite. It hits me that she won't see this skyline for several weeks, and we will be without her. I lean forward, knowing this will be written, and I ask what she'd say if her story had an audience. She smiles. "Tell them to look up. Tell them to remember the stars."

I would rather write her a song, because songs don't wait to resolve, and because songs mean so much to her. Stories wait for endings, but songs are brave things bold enough to sing when all they know is darkness. These words, like most words, will be written next to midnight, between hurricane and harbor, as both claim to save her.

Renee is 19. When I meet her, cocaine is fresh in her system. She hasn't slept in 36 hours and she won't for another 24. It is a familiar blur of coke, pot, pills and alcohol. She has agreed to meet us, to listen and to let us pray. We ask Renee to come with us, to leave this broken night. She says she'll go to rehab tomorrow, but she isn't ready now. It is too great a change. We pray and say goodbye and it is hard to leave without her.

She has known such great pain; haunted dreams as a child, the near-constant presence of evil ever since. She has felt the touch of awful naked men, battled depression and addiction, and attempted suicide. Her arms remember razor blades, fifty scars that speak of self-inflicted wounds. Six hours after I meet her, she is feeling trapped, two groups of "friends" offering opposite ideas. Everyone is asleep. The sun is rising. She drinks long from a bottle of liquor, takes a razor blade from the table and locks herself in the bathroom. She cuts herself, using the blade to write "FUCK UP" large across her left forearm.

The nurse at the treatment center finds the wound several hours later. The center has no detox, names her too great a risk, and does not accept her. For the next five days, she is ours to love. We become her hospital and the possibility of healing fills our living room with life. It is unspoken and there are only a few of us, but we will be her church, the body of Christ coming alive to meet her needs, to write love on her arms.

She is full of contrast, more alive and closer to death than anyone I've known, like a Johnny Cash song or some theatre star. She owns attitude and humor beyond her 19 years, and when she tells me her story, she is humble and quiet and kind, shaped by the pain of a hundred lifetimes. I sit privileged but breaking as she shares. Her life has been so dark yet there is some soft hope in her words, and on consecutive evenings, I watch the prettiest girls in the room tell her that she's beautiful. I think it's God reminding her.

I've never walked this road, but I decide that if we're going to run a five-day rehab, it is going to be the coolest in the country. It is going to be rock and roll. We start with the basics; lots of fun, too much Starbucks and way too many cigarettes.

Thursday night she is in the balcony for Band Marino, Orlando's finest. They are indie-folk-fabulous, a movement disguised as a circus. She loves them and she smiles when I point out the A&R man from Atlantic Europe, in town from London just to catch this show.

She is in good seats when the Magic beat the Sonics the next night, screaming like a lifelong fan with every Dwight Howard dunk. On the way home, we stop for more coffee and books, Blue Like Jazz and (Anne Lamott's) Travelling Mercies.

On Saturday, the Taste of Chaos tour is in town and I'm not even sure we can get in, but doors do open and minutes after parking, we are on stage for Thrice, one of her favorite bands. She stands ten feet from the drummer, smiling constantly. It is a bright moment there in the music, as light and rain collide above the stage. It feels like healing. It is certainly hope.

Sunday night is church and many gather after the service to pray for Renee, this her last night before entering rehab. Some are strangers but all are friends tonight. The prayers move from broken to bold, all encouraging. We're talking to God but I think as much, we're talking to her, telling her she's loved, saying she does not go alone. One among us knows her best. Ryan sits in the corner strumming an acoustic guitar, singing songs she's inspired.

After church our house fills with friends, there for a few more moments before goodbye. Everyone has some gift for her, some note or hug or piece of encouragement. She pulls me aside and tells me she would like to give me something. I smile surprised, wondering what it could be. We walk through the crowded living room, to the garage and her stuff.

She hands me her last razor blade, tells me it is the one she used to cut her arm and her last lines of cocaine five nights before. She's had it with her ever since, shares that tonight will be the hardest night and she shouldn't have it. I hold it carefully, thank her and know instantly that this moment, this gift, will stay with me. It hits me to wonder if this great feeling is what Christ knows when we surrender our broken hearts, when we trade death for life.

As we arrive at the treatment center, she finishes: "The stars are always there but we miss them in the dirt and clouds. We miss them in the storms. Tell them to remember hope. We have hope."

I have watched life come back to her, and it has been a privilege. When our time with her began, someone suggested shifts but that is the language of business. Love is something better. I have been challenged and changed, reminded that love is that simple answer to so many of our hardest questions. Don Miller says we're called to hold our hands against the wounds of a broken world, to stop the bleeding. I agree so greatly.

We often ask God to show up. We pray prayers of rescue. Perhaps God would ask us to be that rescue, to be His body, to move for things that matter. He is not invisible when we come alive. I might be simple but more and more, I believe God works in love, speaks in love, is revealed in our love. I have seen that this week and honestly, it has been simple: Take a broken girl, treat her like a famous princess, give her the best seats in the house. Buy her coffee and cigarettes for the coming down, books and bathroom things for the days ahead. Tell her something true when all she's known are lies. Tell her God loves her. Tell her about forgiveness, the possibility of freedom, tell her she was made to dance in white dresses. All these things are true.

We are only asked to love, to offer hope to the many hopeless. We don't get to choose all the endings, but we are asked to play the rescuers. We won't solve all mysteries and our hearts will certainly break in such a vulnerable life, but it is the best way. We were made to be lovers bold in broken places, pouring ourselves out again and again until we're called home.

I have learned so much in one week with one brave girl. She is alive now, in the patience and safety of rehab, covered in marks of madness but choosing to believe that God makes things new, that He meant hope and healing in the stars. She would ask you to remember. "






LIFE IS WORTH LIVING




Cheers!
 
Though the direct quote escapes me, my favorite philosophy prof once quoted a philosopher who said something along the lines of "If Hegel had ended Phenomenology of the Spirit with the line, 'And, I'm just kidding', it would've been the best philosophy book, ever." ;)

On a more serious note...Khalil Gibran's Sand and Foam frequently gives me comfort:

A pearl is a temple built by pain around a grain of sand. What longing built our bodies and around what grains?

You are blind and I am deaf and dumb, so let us touch hands and understand.

Some of us are like ink and some like paper.
And if it were not for the blackness of some of us, some of us would be dumb;
And if were not for the whiteness of some of us, some of us would be blind.
 
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"The trouble with the world is that the stupid are cocksure and the intelligent are full of doubt."
-Bertrand Russell

"Does wisdom perhaps appear on the earth as a raven which is inspired by the smell of carrion?"
-Friedrich Nietzsche

"And if you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you."
-Friedrich Nietzsche

"The unexamined life is not worth living."
-Socrates

"Life is a business that does not cover the costs."
-Arthur Schopenhauer

"Life is not worth living."
-Arthur Schopenhauer

"We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars."
-Oscar Wilde
 
"We live in a cloud of illusions and rarely realize that we are spinning this web of fiction for all the hours and days of our lives, unless we are fortunate or unfortunate enough to die slowly. Perhaps slow death may be the only moments of reality for the total life of many earthlings. Because the dying person is forced to face the fact that he is about to become zero." - Richard Rose
 
I'm actually really inspired by a lot of what Omar Rodriguez-Lopez (of The Mars Volta) has gone on to say in interviews. A favorite of mine can be found in this one when the interviewer asks him what he is most proud of:

"I'm proud of everything I've done. I'm most proud of my mistakes, I think, probably. Because my mistakes help me learn and grow the most, even more than the things that I achieve and I'm agreeable with. My mistakes and my conflicts are the only way that I move forward..."

I think a lot of us here can relate to that.

But I think that everything he says in this interview is just amazing. It's really worth watching (two parts):

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E5tmxb64Ics
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VGEuNESfwrw
 
"Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived forwards." -- Soren Kierkegaard

"People intoxicate themselves with work so they won't see how they really are." -- Aldous Huxley

"Nobody realizes that some people expend tremendous energy merely to be normal." -- Albert Camus
 
"Nobody realizes that some people expend tremendous energy merely to be normal." -- Albert Camus

+1. I had just recently read this quote with appreciation, but was doubly shocked to learn that it was written by Albert Camus. 1) This hadn't been thought of before 1950something? 2) Isn't Camus generally regarded as the least neurotic and the most actively sane/social of the existentialists?

"Sanity is a madness put to good uses; waking life is a dream controlled."
-George Santayana
 
"What is done out of love always takes place beyond good and evil" -Nietzsche
 
+1. I had just recently read this quote with appreciation, but was doubly shocked to learn that it was written by Albert Camus. 1) This hadn't been thought of before 1950something? 2) Isn't Camus generally regarded as the least neurotic and the most actively sane/social of the existentialists?

"Sanity is a madness put to good uses; waking life is a dream controlled."
-George Santayana

Well it was published posthumously in "Notebooks 1943-1951" which didn't get published till 1965. I've never heard of Camus being regarded as "least neurotic" than other existentialist even though he himself denied being an existentialist. Read "The Stranger" and see if you think he is less neurotic than Sartre
 
Read "The Stranger" and see if you think he is less neurotic than Sartre

Yeah, that's already happened. I even read the The Plague and The Myth of Sisyphus to boot. Honestly, he came across to me as more of a (for lack of a better word) 'macho' kind of guy. Maybe that was just some kind of projection or whatever...

I mean, Meursault is quite the violent misogynist, and Dr. Rieaux et al. are certainly possessed of more strapping qualities than most male characters that I happen upon in novels these days. You must know what I mean. It's like he met Earnest Hemingway once or twice and decided that he was to be the partial model for, like, literally >half of his main characters. His ostensible machismo was just a vague impression of mine, though, and probably a false one.
 
I need to compile more quotes by comedians, anyone have good ones? This is my little list

Tell a man there are 300 billion stars in the universe and he'll believe you. Tell him a bench has wet paint on it and he'll have to touch it to be sure. - Murphy's Law

If you cannot be a poet, be the poem. - David Carradine

Painting is easy when you don't know how, but very difficult when you do. - Edgar Degas

Find out what it is in life that you do not do well, and then don't do that thing. - John Goldsmith

Rovesciare i propri occhi. - Giuseppe Penone

Only the most exceptional humans become aware of the matrix.- The Animatrix

As long as there are slaughterhouses, there will be battlefields. - Leo Tolstoy

Any kind of consciousness that is not related to the production or consumption of material goods is stigmatized in our society. - Graham Hancock
 
6.5 When the answer cannot be put into words, neither can the question be put into words. The riddle does not
exist. If a question can be framed at all, it is also possible to answer it.
6.51 Scepticism is not irrefutable, but obviously nonsensical, when it tries to raise doubts where no
questions can be asked. For doubt can exist only where a question exists, a question only where an
answer exists, and an answer only where something can be said.
6.52 We feel that even when all possible scientific questions have been answered, the problems of life
remain completely untouched. Of course there are then no questions left, and this itself is the answer.
6.521 The solution of the problem of life is seen in the vanishing of the problem. (Is not this the
reason why those who have found after a long period of doubt that the sense of life became clear
to them have then been unable to say what constituted that sense?)
6.522 There are, indeed, things that cannot be put into words. They make themselves manifest.
They are what is mystical.
6.53 The correct method in philosophy would really be the following: to say nothing except what can be
said, i.e. propositions of natural science--i.e. something that has nothing to do with philosophy -- and
then, whenever someone else wanted to say something metaphysical, to demonstrate to him that he had
failed to give a meaning to certain signs in his propositions. Although it would not be satisfying to the
other person--he would not have the feeling that we were teaching him philosophy--this method would be
the only strictly correct one.
6.54 My propositions are elucidatory in this way: he who understands me finally recognizes them as
senseless, when he has climbed out through them, on them, over them. (He must so to speak throw away
the ladder, after he has climbed up on it.)
7 What we cannot speak about we must pass over in silence.
 
"Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end, for they do so with the approval of their own conscience." ~ CS lewis

"Never bend over for a Christian."
- Frank Zappa

"Belief and desire are the great duality which engender all illusions that entangle the senses [i.e. sexuality] and prevent free will."
- Austin Spare

"I blow my load in a girl's hair out of respect for the environment and mother nature, and not only do I have to drive 15 mph on my way home to jack off and watch the Simpsons, you're not even at the school to help your little shit head get across the street."
- Doug Stanhope on overpopulation

"Sometimes I wish I’d went through those good times stone cold sober so I could remember everything, but then again, if I had been sober the times probably wouldn’t have been worth remembering."
-F. Scott Fitzgerald

"Jesus Christ, our lord and saviour of all that is good and holy, deliver me from fat people in short pants." - George Carlin
 
All from Richard Feynman. Nobel prize winning physicist, father of quantum electrodynamics, and ladies man [if you can believe that]

It doesn't matter how beautiful your theory is, it doesn't matter how smart you are. If it doesn't agree with experiment, it's wrong.

Reality must take precedence over public relations, for nature cannot be fooled.

You can know the name of a bird in all the languages of the world, but when you're finished, you'll know absolutely nothing whatever about the bird... So let's look at the bird and see what it's doing -- that's what counts. I learned very early the difference between knowing the name of something and knowing something.

Poets say science takes away from the beauty of the stars - mere globs of gas atoms. I too can see the stars on a desert night, and feel them. But do I see less or more? The vastness of the heavens stretches my imagination - stuck on this carousel my little eye can catch one - million - year - old light. A vast pattern - of which I am a part... What is the pattern, or the meaning, or the why? It does not do harm to the mystery to know a little about it. For far more marvelous is the truth than any artists of the past imagined it. Why do the poets of the present not speak of it? What men are poets who can speak of Jupiter if he were a man, but if he is an immense spinning sphere of methane and ammonia must be silent?
 
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