
“Madness is an illness of the brain, not of the mind.”
Source: Memoirs of a Madman
“Madness is an illness of the brain, not of the mind.”
“For all the ill that is in us comes from fear, and all the good from love.”
Martin Pippin in the Apple Orchard (1922)
Context: Women are so strangely constructed that they have in them darkness as well as light, though it be but a little curtain hung across the sun. And love is the hand that takes the curtain down, a stronger hand than fear, which hung it up. For all the ill that is in us comes from fear, and all the good from love.
Source: In Praise of Philosophy (1963), p. 5
Context: Even those who have desired to work out a completely positive philosophy have been philosophers only to the extent that, at the same time, they have refused the right to install themselves in absolute knowledge. They taught not this knowledge, but its becoming in us, not the absolute but, at most, our absolute relation to it, as Kierkegaard said. What makes a philosopher is the movement which leads back without ceasing from knowledge to ignorance, from ignorance to knowledge, and a kind of rest in this movement.
“Doubt is the offspring of knowledge: the savage never doubts at all.”
Source: The Martyrdom of Man (1872), Chapter II, "Religion", p. 189.
“The courage of the poet is to keep ajar the door that leads into madness.”
“Mad smoke makes me able to quote
Soliciting ill editions of that murder I wrote.”
Nas Is Coming
On Albums, It Was Written (1996)
Statement of 1996, as quoted in Dr. Riemann's Zeros (2003) by Karl Sabbagh, p. 88
1990s