“We get into the habit of living before acquiring the habit of thinking.”
Albert Camus book The Myth of Sisyphus
The Myth of Sisyphus (1942), An Absurd Reasoning
Diary of an Unknown (1988), On Invisibility
Context: Beauty is always the result of an accident. Of a violent lapse between acquired habits and those yet to be acquired. It baffles and disgusts. It may even horrify. Once the new habit has been acquired, the accident ceases to be an accident. It becomes classical and loses its shock value.
“We get into the habit of living before acquiring the habit of thinking.”
Albert Camus book The Myth of Sisyphus
The Myth of Sisyphus (1942), An Absurd Reasoning
“Liberty is not merely a privilege to be conferred; it is a habit to be acquired.”
David Lloyd George (1863–1945) Former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
Speech in the House of Commons (10 May 1928)
Later life
Charles Lyell (1797–1875) British lawyer and geologist
Source: The Geological Evidences of the Antiquity of Man (1863), Ch.21, p. 411
Rosa Luxemburg (1871–1919) Polish Marxist theorist, socialist philosopher, and revolutionary
Organizational Questions of the Russian Social Democracy http://www.marxists.org/archive/luxemburg/1904/questions-rsd/ch01.htm (1904) <br class="br">Context: The self-discipline of the Social Democracy is not merely the replacement of the authority of bourgeois rulers with the authority of a socialist central committee. The working class will acquire the sense of the new discipline, the freely assumed self-discipline of the Social Democracy, not as a result of the discipline imposed on it by the capitalist state, but by extirpating, to the last root, its old habits of obedience and servility.
Ernest Flagg (1857–1947) American architect
Introduction
Small Houses: Their Economic Design and Construction (1922)
Fyodor Dostoyevsky (1821–1881) Russian author
As quoted in Peter's Quotations : Ideas for Our Time (1979) by Laurence J. Peter, p. 299
Seneca the Younger book Epistulae morales ad Lucilium
Epistulae Morales ad Lucilium (Moral Letters to Lucilius), Letter XLVII: On master and slave