
The Toynbee-Ikeda Dialogue: Man Himself Must Choose (1976).
Source: The Courage to Be (1952), p. 113
The Toynbee-Ikeda Dialogue: Man Himself Must Choose (1976).
Source: Black Genius: African-American Solutions to African-American Problems
(I.3) Del Rey, p. 75
Blade of Tyshalle (2001)
Context: "I respect what is repectable," Tan'elkoth replied. "To ask for respect where none has been earned is childish maundering. And what is repectable, in the end, save service? Even your idol Jefferson is, in the end, measured by how well he served the species. The prize of individualism--its goal--is self-actualization, which is only another name for vanity. We do not admire men for achieving self-actualization; we admire self-actualization when its end result is a boon to humanity."
“Every man has a mob self and an individual self, in varying proportions.”
Pornography and Obscenity (1929)
Writing and Being (1991)
Context: Like the prisoners incarcerated with the jaguar in Borges' story, 'The God's Script', who was trying to read, in a ray of light which fell only once a day, the meaning of being from the marking on the creature's pelt, we spend our lives attempting to interpret through the word the readings we take in the societies, the world of which we are part. It is in this sense, this inextricable, ineffable participation, that writing is always and at once an exploration of self and of the world; of individual and collective being.