“Barbusse has shown us that the Outsider is a man who cannot live in the comfortable, insulated world of the bourgeois, accepting what he sees and touches as reality.”
Source: The Outsider (1956), Chapter one, The Country of the Blind
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Colin Wilson 192
author 1931–2013Related quotes

It is still a question of self-expression.
Source: The Outsider (1956), Chapter Four The Attempt to Gain Control

1960s, Freedom From The Known (1969)
Context: The world accepts and follows the traditional approach. The primary cause of disorder in ourselves is the seeking of reality promised by another; we mechanically follow somebody who will assure us a comfortable spiritual life. It is a most extraordinary thing that although most of us are opposed to political tyranny and dictatorship, we inwardly accept the authority, the tyranny, of another to twist our minds and our way of life. So if we completely reject, not intellectually but actually, all so-called spiritual authority, all ceremonies, rituals and dogmas, it means that we stand alone and are already in conflict with society; we cease to be respectable human beings. A respectable human being cannot possibly come near to that infinite, immeasurable, reality.
Source: The Bourgeois: Catholicism vs. Capitalism in Eighteenth-Century France (1927), p. 15

A Collection of Essays, pp. 65-66
Charles Dickens (1939)

“I'm a man for whom the outside world is an inner reality.”
Ibid., p. 376
The Book of Disquiet
Original: Sou um homem para quem o mundo exterior é uma realidade interior.

“Man lives in a world of Meaning. What he sees and hears means what he will or might handle.”
George Herbert Mead (1926). "The Nature of Aesthetic Experience." International Journal of Ethics, Vol. 36, No. 4 (Jul., 1926), pp. 382-393; p. 382
Source: Break-Out from the Crystal Palace (1974), p. 96