Susanna Kaysen book Girl, Interrupted
Variant: I think many people kill themselves simply to stop the debate about whether they will or they won't.
Source: Girl, Interrupted
G 29
Aphorisms (1765-1799), Notebook G (1779-1783)
Susanna Kaysen book Girl, Interrupted
Variant: I think many people kill themselves simply to stop the debate about whether they will or they won't.
Source: Girl, Interrupted
P. D. Ouspensky (1878–1947) Russian esotericist
Fourth Lecture, p. 70.
The Psychology of Man's Possible Evolution (1950)
Context: People who think they can control their negative emotions and manifest them when they want to, simply deceive themselves. Negative emotions depend on identification; if identification is destroyed in some particular case, they disappear. The strangest and most fantastic fact about negative emotions is that people actually worship them. I think that, for an ordinary mechanical man, the most difficult thing to realise is that his own and other people's negative emotions, have no value whatever and do not contain anything noble, anything beautiful or anything strong. In reality negative emotions contain nothing but weakness and very often the beginning of hysteria, insanity or crime. The only good thing about them is that, being quite useless and artificially created by imagination and identification, they can be destroyed without any loss. And this is the only chance of escape that man has.
“People accept their limitations so as to prevent themselves from wanting anything they might get.”
Celia Green (1935) British philosopher
The Decline and Fall of Science (1976)
Jay Nordlinger (1963) American journalist
Twitter post https://twitter.com/jaynordlinger/status/1037393063616937984 (5 September 2018) <br class="br">2010s
Charles Caleb Colton (1777–1832) British priest and writer
Source: Lacon (1820) Vol. II; CCXLVIII
“… one reads, above all, to prevent oneself thinking.”
Aldous Huxley book Crome Yellow
Source: Crome Yellow
“One cannot prevent people from thinking what they please.”
Friedrich Schiller Mary Stuart
Man kann den Menschen nicht verwehren, Zu denken, was sie wollen.
Maria Stuart, Act I, sc. viii (1800)