
“Some things in life are too complicated to explain in any language.”
Source: Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage
Prayer and the Art of Volkswagen Maintenance (2000, Harvest House Publishers)
“Some things in life are too complicated to explain in any language.”
Source: Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage
“Life is very, very complicated and so films should be allowed to be too.”
As quoted in The Los Angeles Times (20 April 2003)
1910s, The Principles of Natural Knowledge (1919)
Source: Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance (1974), Ch. 30
Context: It is an immortal dialogue, strange and puzzling at first, but then hitting you harder and harder, like truth itself. What Phædrus has been talking about as Quality, Socrates appears to have described as the soul, self-moving, the source of all things. There is no contradiction. There never really can be between the core terms of monistic philosophies. The One in India has got to be the same as the One in Greece. If it's not, you've got two. The only disagreements among the monists concern the attributes of the One, not the One itself. Since the One is the source of all things and includes all things in it, it cannot be defined in terms of those things, since no matter what thing you use to define it, the thing will always describe something less than the One itself. The One can only be described allegorically, through the use of analogy, of figures of imagination and speech. Socrates chooses a heaven-and-earth analogy, showing how individuals are drawn toward the One by a chariot drawn by two horses.
Interview in Writers at Work, Second Series (1963) edited by George Plimpton.