Charles Bukowski book Women
Variant: You begin saving the world by saving one person at a time; all else is grandiose romanticism or politics.
Source: Women
Source: Introduction to the New Existentialism (1966), p. 96
Context: Now the basic impulse behind existentialism is optimistic, very much like the impulse behind all science. Existentialism is romanticism, and romanticism is the feeling that man is not the mere he has always taken himself for. Romanticism began as a tremendous surge of optimism about the stature of man. Its aim — like that of science — was to raise man above the muddled feelings and impulses of his everyday humanity, and to make him a god-like observer of human existence.
Charles Bukowski book Women
Variant: You begin saving the world by saving one person at a time; all else is grandiose romanticism or politics.
Source: Women
“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
John Carroll (1944) Australian professor and author
Source: Break-Out from the Crystal Palace (1974), p. 40
“A man has to live with himself, and he should see to it that he always has good company.”
Charles Evans Hughes (1862–1948) American judge
As quoted in Ethics and Citizenship (1924) by John Walter Wayland, p. 208.
Erich Fromm (1900–1980) German social psychologist and psychoanalyst
Source: The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness (1973), p. 262
Eugène Delacroix (1798–1863) French painter
Quote from Delacroix' letter to Théophile Silvestre, Paris, 31 December 1858; as quoted in Eugene Delacroix – selected letters 1813 – 1863, ed. and translation Jean Stewart, art Works MFA publications, Museum of Fine Art Boston, 2001, p. 352
1831 - 1863
“The fool has one great advantage over a man of sense — he is always satisfied with himself.”
Napoleon I of France (1769–1821) French general, First Consul and later Emperor of the French
Napoleon : In His Own Words (1916)
Tobias Dantzig (1884–1956) American mathematician
Henri Poincaré, Critic of Crisis: Reflections on His Universe of Discourse (1954), Ch. 2. The Age of Innocence
Henri Fantin-Latour (1836–1904) painter from France
quote in Fantin-Latour's letter to his English friend Edwin Edwards 14 April, 1866; as quoted by Colin B. Bailey, in The Annenberg Collection: Masterpieces of Impressionism and Post-impressionism, publish. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 2009, p. 48