Page 138
The Book on the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are (1966)
Alan Watts: Being
Alan Watts was British philosopher, writer and speaker. Explore interesting quotes on being.
Play to Live : Lectures of Alan Watts (1982)
Context: Archimedes said, "Give me a fulcrum and I will move the Earth"; but there isn't one. It is like betting on the future of the human race — I might wish to lay a bet that the human race would destroy itself by the year 2000, but there is nowhere to place the bet. On the contrary, I am involved in the world and must try to see that it does not blow itself to pieces. I once had a terrible argument with Margaret Mead. She was holding forth one evening on the absolute horror of the atomic bomb, and how everybody should spring into action and abolish it, but she was getting so furious about it that I said to her: "You scare me because I think you are the kind of person who will push the button in order to get rid of the other people who were going to push it first." So she told me that I had no love for my future generations, that I had no responsibility for my children, and that I was a phony swami who believed in retreating from facts. But I maintained my position. As Robert Oppenheimer said a short while before he died, "It is perfectly obvious that the whole world is going to hell. The only possible chance that it might not is that we do not attempt to prevent it from doing so." You see, many of the troubles going on in the world right now are being supervised by people with very good intentions whose attempts are to keep things in order, to clean things up, to forbid this, and to prevent that. The more we try to put everything to rights, the more we make fantastic messes. Maybe that is the way it has got to be. Maybe I should not say anything at all about the folly of trying to put things to right but simply, on the principle of Blake, let the fool persist in his folly so that he will become wise.
Source: The Book on the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are (1966), p. 53
Source: The Book on the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are (1966), p. 104-105
Source: The Book on the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are (1966), p. 53-54
Source: Psychotherapy, East and West (1961), p. 8
Source: In My Own Way: An Autobiography 1915-1965 (1972), p. 61
Source: The Book on the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are (1966), p. 74
Source: Out of Your Mind: Tricksters, Interdependence, and the Cosmic Game of Hide-and-Seek (2017), p. 8
Source: The Book on the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are (1966), p. 22
Source: The Book on the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are (1966), p. 111-112
Source: The Book on the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are (1966), p. 78
The Nature of Consciousness http://www.erowid.org/culture/characters/watts_alan/watts_alan_article1.shtml; also published as What Is Reality? (1989)
The Nature of Consciousness; also published as What Is Reality? (1989)
Foreward to The Secret Oral Teachings in the Tibetan Buddhist Sects (1964)], by Alexandra David Neel
“We cannot be more sensitive to pleasure without being more sensitive to pain.”
Source: The Wisdom of Insecurity: A Message for an Age of Anxiety