Introduction
The Culture of Cities (1938)
Context: Nothing is permanent: certainly not the frozen images of barbarous power with which fascism now confronts us. Those images may easily be smashed by an external shock, cracked as ignominiously as the fallen Dagon, the massive idol of the heathen; or they may be melted, eventually, by the internal warmth of normal men and women. Nothing endures except life: the capacity for birth, growth, and renewal. As life becomes insurgent once more in our civilization, conquering the reckless thrust of barbarism, the culture of cities will be both instrument and goal.
“How many times has Fascism been accused with obtuse malevolence of barbarity? Well yes: once you understand the true significance of this barbarity we will boast of it, as the expression of the healthy energies which shatter false and baleful idols, and restore the health of the nation within the power of a State conscious of its sovereign rights which are its duties.”
Che cosa è fascismo? (What is fascism?), lecture delivered in Florence (March 8, 1925)
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Giovanni Gentile 11
Italian neo-Hegelian Idealist philosopher and politician 1875–1944Related quotes
“[T]here was never an army that did not accuse its enemies of barbarity.”
Source: Witch Wood (1927), Ch. XIII "White Magic"
Napoleon : In His Own Words (1916)
Géographie, in Les Oeuvres Mathématiques de Simon Stevin de Bruges (1634) ed. Girard, p. 106-108, as quoted by Jacob Klein, Greek Mathematical Thought and the Origin of Algebra (1968)
President Saddam Hussein's Speech on National Day (1981)
"Modern Examples of Background Physics" ["Moderne Beispiele zur Hintergrundsphysik"] (1948) as translated by David Roscoe in Atom and Archetype (1992) edited by Carl Alfred Meier
Context: It seems significant that according to quantum physics the indestructibility of energy on one hand — which expresses its timeless existence — and the appearance of energy in space and time on the other hand correspond to two contradictory (complementary) aspects of reality. In fact, both are always present, but in individual cases the one or the other may be more pronounced.
“Property has its duties as well as its rights.”
Letter to the Landlords of Tipperary, May 22, 1838. See also Benjamin Disraeli, Sybil, book ii. chapter xi.
Writings, Yugoslav "Self-Administration" - Capitalist Theory and Practice
“Barbarism is an unused energy.”
Michel Henry, La Barbarie, éd. Grasset, 1987, p. 177
Books on Culture and Barbarism, Barbarism (1987)
Original: (fr) La barbarie est une énergie inemployée.