Friedrich Nietzsche book Philosophy in the Tragic Age of the Greeks
Source: Philosophy in the Tragic Age of the Greeks (posthumous), p. 27
Source: The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness (1973), p. 395
Context: The sick individual finds himself at home with all other similarly sick individuals. The whole culture is geared to this kind of pathology. The result is that the average individual does not experience the separateness and isolation the fully schizophrenic person feels. He feels at ease among those who suffer from the same deformation; in fact, it is the fully sane person who feels isolated in the insane society — and he may suffer so much from the incapacity to communicate that it is he who may become psychotic. In the context of this study the crucial question is whether the hypothesis of a quasi-autistic or of low-grade schizophrenic disturbance would help us to explain some of the violence spreading today.
Friedrich Nietzsche book Philosophy in the Tragic Age of the Greeks
Source: Philosophy in the Tragic Age of the Greeks (posthumous), p. 27
“Philosophy is properly Home-sickness; the wish to be everywhere at home.”
Novalis (1772–1801) German poet and writer
Philosophie ist eigentlich Heimweh - Trieb überall zu Hause zu sein.
Novalis (1829)
Variant: Philosophy is really nostalgia, the desire to be at home.
“The shaman is not merely a sick man, or a madman; he is a sick man who has healed himself.”
Terence McKenna (1946–2000) American ethnobotanist
Source: The Invisible Landscape: Mind, Hallucinogens & the I Ching
“The individual is quite a world of federations, a whole universe in himself.”
Peter Kropotkin (1842–1921) Russian zoologist, evolutionary theorist, philosopher, scientist, revolutionary, economist, activist, geogr…
Anarchism: Its Philosophy and Ideal (1896)
Context: When a physiologist speaks now of the life of a plant or of an animal, he sees rather an agglomeration, a colony of millions of separate individuals than a personality one and indivisible. He speaks of a federation of digestive, sensual, nervous organs, all very intimately connected with one another, each feeling the consequence of the well-being or indisposition of each, but each living its own life. Each organ, each part of an organ in its turn is composed of independent cellules which associate to struggle against conditions unfavorable to their existence. The individual is quite a world of federations, a whole universe in himself.
Mircea Eliade book Shamanism: Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy
Source: Shamanism: Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy
“Indifference is the sign of sickness, a sickness of the soul more contagious than any other.”
Elie Wiesel (1928–2016) writer, professor, political activist, Nobel Laureate, and Holocaust survivor
Source: The Judges
J. Howard Moore (1862–1916)
Source: Better-World Philosophy: A Sociological Synthesis (1899), The Social Ideal, pp. 146–147
“How sickness enlarges the dimensions of a man's self to himself.”
Charles Lamb Last Essays of Elia
The Convalescent.
Last Essays of Elia (1833)
Erving Goffman book The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life
Source: 1950s-1960s, The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life, 1959, p. 229