"We use most of our powers to extend life. In so doing, we succeed only in reducing life to survival. We live in order to survive.
The mania for health and optimization is a reflexive response to the lack of being. We try to compensate for the absence of being by extending bare life, and in doing so we become desensitized to life's intensity.
We confuse it with increased production, performance and consumption, but these are merely forms of survival."
--Byung-Chul Han
The mania for health and optimization is a reflexive response to the lack of being. We try to compensate for the absence of being by extending bare life, and in doing so we become desensitized to life's intensity.
We confuse it with increased production, performance and consumption, but these are merely forms of survival."
--Byung-Chul Han
"Contemporary society is characterized by constant and relentless moralizing. But at the same time society is becoming more and more brutal. Forms of politeness are disappearing, disregarded by the cult of authenticity.
Beautiful forms of conduct are becoming ever rarer. In this respect, too, we are becoming hostile towards form.
Apparently, the ascendancy of morality is compatible with the barbarization of society. Morality is formless. Moral inwardness dispenses with form. One might even say: the more moralizing a society, the more impolite it is."
-- Byung-Chul Han
Beautiful forms of conduct are becoming ever rarer. In this respect, too, we are becoming hostile towards form.
Apparently, the ascendancy of morality is compatible with the barbarization of society. Morality is formless. Moral inwardness dispenses with form. One might even say: the more moralizing a society, the more impolite it is."
-- Byung-Chul Han
“Nothing is more alien to the present age than idleness. If we think of resting from our labours, it is only in order to return to them. In thinking so highly of work we are aberrant. Few other cultures have ever done so. For nearly all of history and all prehistory, work was an indignity.”
― John Gray
― John Gray
"A denial of the past, superficially progressive and optimistic, proves on closer analysis to embody the despair of a society that cannot face the future...
To live for the moment is the prevailing passion—to live for yourself, not for your predecessors or posterity. We are fast losing the sense of historical continuity, the sense of belonging to a succession of generations originating in the past and stretching into the future."
-- Christopher Lasch
To live for the moment is the prevailing passion—to live for yourself, not for your predecessors or posterity. We are fast losing the sense of historical continuity, the sense of belonging to a succession of generations originating in the past and stretching into the future."
-- Christopher Lasch
"The joy of life comes through peace, which is not static but dynamic. No man can really say that he knows what joy is until he has experienced peace. And without joy there is no life, even if you have a dozen cars, six butlers, a castle, a private chapel and a bomb-proof vault.
Our diseases are our attachments, be they habits, ideologies, ideals, principles, possessions, phobias, gods, cults, religions, what you please."
-- Henry Miller
Our diseases are our attachments, be they habits, ideologies, ideals, principles, possessions, phobias, gods, cults, religions, what you please."
-- Henry Miller
“Let me tell you something. Happiness is bullshit. It's the great myth of the late 20th century. You think Picasso was happy? You think Hemingway was? Hendrix? They were miserable shits.
No art worth a damn was ever created out of happiness. I can tell you that. Ambition, narcissism, sex, rage.
Those are the engines that drive every great artist, every great man. A hole that can't be filled. That's why we're all such miserable assholes.”
-- Ed Harris, Kodachrome
No art worth a damn was ever created out of happiness. I can tell you that. Ambition, narcissism, sex, rage.
Those are the engines that drive every great artist, every great man. A hole that can't be filled. That's why we're all such miserable assholes.”
-- Ed Harris, Kodachrome