Playboy interview (1996)
Context: If NASA's budgeters could be convinced that there are riches on Mars, we would explode overnight to stand on the rim of the Martian abyss. We need space for reasons we have not as yet discovered, and I don't mean Tupperware. … NASA feels it has to justify everything it does in practical terms.
And Tupperware was one of the many practical products that came out of space travel. NASA feels it has got to flimflam you to get you to spend money on space. That's B. S. We don't need that. Space travel is life-enhancing, and anything that's life-enhancing is worth doing. It makes you want to live forever.
“(…) anything that systematically enhances moral hazard is simply manufacturing craziness.”
"Suspended Animation (Part 5)" https://web.archive.org/web/20121111032650/http://www.thatsmags.com/shanghai/article/1524/suspended-animation-part-5 (2011)
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Nick Land 58
British philosopher 1962Related quotes
“We take, and must continue to take, morally hazardous actions to preserve our civilization.”
The Irony of American History (1952)
Context: We take, and must continue to take, morally hazardous actions to preserve our civilization. We must exercise our power. But we ought neither to believe that a nation is capable of perfect disinterestedness in its exercise, nor become complacent about a particular degree of interest and passion which corrupt the justice by which the exercise of power is legitimatized.
“Any virtue systematically applied becomes a vice. Morality is attention, not system.”
#398
Vectors: Aphorisms and Ten Second Essays (2001)
“Incolore sighed. “The loyalty of the systematically betrayed. Is there anything sadder?””
Source: The Iron Dragon's Daughter (1993), Chapter 21 (p. 378)
Commentary in The Guardian (4 March 2005)
“[She] was made up of skin and bones and hate and crazy, and hate and crazy don't weigh anything.”
Source: I Hunt Killers
“I'm fit and I'm angry, and I'm obviously crazy. Anything could happen.”
Source: The Lies of Locke Lamora
Research by the Business Itself (1945), p. 81
“Anything that is moral for a group to do is moral for one person to do.”
There must be a flaw in that, since I’ve always been taught that it is wrong to take the law in your own hands. But I can’t find the flaw and it sounds axiomatic, self-evident. Switch it around. If something is wrong for one person to do, can it possibly be made right by having a lot of people (a government) agree to do it together? Even unanimously?
If anything is wrong, it is wrong—and vox populi can’t change it.
Source: Podkayne of Mars (1963), Chapter 13 (p. 169)