“We can begin, like the Scholastic masters, with an objection: videtur quod non … ""It seems not to be true that…"" And this is the objection: a time like the present [i. e., a few years after the Second World War, in Germany] seems, of all times, not to be a time to speak of leisure. […]
That is no small objection. But there is also a good answer to it. […]
For, when we consider the foundations of Western European culture (is it, perhaps, too rash to assume that our re-building will in fact be carried out in a ""Western"" spirit? Indeed, this and no other is the very assumption that is at issue today), one of these foundations is leisure. We can read it in the first chapter of Aristotle's Metaphysics. And the very history of the meaning of the word bears a similar message. The Greek word for leisure (σχολή) is the origin of Latin scola, German Schule, English school. The names for the institutions of education and learning mean ""leisure.""”
Source: Leisure, the Basis of Culture (1948), Leisure, the Basis of Culture, pp. 3–4
Help us to complete the source, original and additional information
Josef Pieper45
German philosopher 1904–1997Related quotes
Source: Essays on object-oriented software engineering (1993), p. 335; as cited in Edward V. Berard (1995) " A Comparison of Object-Oriented Development Methodologies http://www.ipipan.gda.pl/~marek/objects/TOA/OOMethod/mcr.html". The Object Agency, Inc.
Henry Kaufman (1927) American economist
Interest Rates, the Markets, and the New Financial World (1986)
Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling (1775–1854) German philosopher (idealism)
System of Transcendental Philosophy (1800)
Max Tegmark book Our Mathematical Universe
Our Mathematical Universe: My Quest for the Ultimate Nature of Reality (2014)
Abraham Lincoln (1809–1865) 16th President of the United States
1860s, First Inaugural Address (1861)