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  • A hero is one who knows how to hang on one minute longer.

  • Only as far as a man is happily married to himself is he fit for married life and family life in general.

  • Only an artist can interpret the meaning of life.

  • Learning is pleasurable but doing is the height of enjoyment.

  • I was still blind , but twinkling stars did dance Throughout my being's limitless expanse, Nothing had yet drawn close, only at distant stages I found myself, a mere suggestion sensed in past and future ages.

  • Poetry heals the wounds inflicted by reason.

  • Knowledge is only one half. Faith is the other.

  • The history of every individual man should be a Bible.

  • In a work of art, chaos must shimmer through the veil of order.

  • Philosophy is properly home-sickness; the wish to be everywhere at home.

  • Nothing is more indispensable to true religiosity than a mediator that links us with divinity.

  • We are near waking when we dream we are dreaming.

  • Nature is a petrified magic city.

  • Character and fate are two words for the same thing.

  • Where children are, there is the golden age.

  • Man has his being in truth--if he sacrifices truth he sacrifices himself. Whoever betrays truth betrays himself. It is not a question of lying--but of acting against one's conviction.

  • If the world is a precipitation of human nature, so to speak, then the divine world is a sublimation of the same. Both occur in one act. No precipitation without sublimation. What goes lost there in agility, is won here.

  • Perceptibility is a kind of attentiveness.

  • I often feel, and ever more deeply I realize, that fate and character are the same conception.

  • Philosophy ... bears witness to the deepest love of reflection, to absolute delight in wisdom.

  • The highest purpose of intellectual cultivation is to give a man a perfect knowledge and mastery of his own inner self.

  • Sometimes with the most intense pain a paralysis of sensibility occurs. The soul disintegrates--hence the deadly frost--the free power of the mind--the shattering, ceaseless wit of this kind of despair. There is no inclination for anything any more--the person is alone, like a baleful power--as he has no connection with the rest of the world he consumes himself gradually--and in accordance with his own principle he is--misanthropic and misotheos.

  • Every disease is a musical problem. Its cure a musical solution. The more rapid and complete the solution, the greater the musical talent of the doctor.

  • The ideal of morality has no more dangerous rival than the ideal of highest strength, of most powerful life. It is the maximum of the savage.

  • Friendship, love, and piety ought to be handled with a sort of mysterious secrecy; they ought to be spoken of only in the rare moments of perfect confidence, to be mutually understood in silence. Many things are too delicate to be thought; many more, to be spoken.

  • What delights, what pleasures does your life offer you that outweigh the raptures of death?"

  • Doing philosophy is only a threefold or double kind of waking--being awake--consciousness.

  • The artist stands on the human being as a statue does on a pedestal.

  • Genius in general is poetic. Where genius has been active it has been poetically active. The truly moral person is a poet.

  • Humanity is the higher meaning of our planet, the nerve that connects this part of it with the upper world, the eye it raises to heaven.

  • To become properly acquainted with a truth, we must first have disbelieved it, and disputed against it.

  • Every beloved object is the center point of a paradise.

  • The artist belongs to his work, not the work to the artist.

  • A certain degree of solitude seems necessary to the full growth and spread of the highest mind; and therefore must a very extensive intercourse with men stifle many a holy germ, and scare away the gods, who shun the restless tumult of noisy companies and the discussion of petty interests.

  • A character is a completely fashioned will.

  • A complete need should not exist... love, life in common with loved ones?

  • A God-intoxicated man. [Ger., Gott-trunkener Mensch.]

  • Accident is simply unforeseen order.

  • All power appears only in transition. Permanent power is stuff.

  • All the events of our life are materials of which we can make what we will.

  • Before abstraction everything is one, but one like chaos; after abstraction everything is united again, but this union is a free binding of autonomous, self-determined beings. Out of a mob a society has developed, chaos has been transformed into a manifold world.

  • Blood will stream over Europe until the nations become aware of the frightful madness which drives them in circles. And then, struck by celestial music and made gentle, they approach their former altars all together, hear about the works of peace, and hold a great celebration of peace with fervent tears before the smoking altars.

  • Building worlds is not enough for the deeper urging mind; but a loving heart sates the striving spirit.

  • Character and fate are two words for the same thing

  • Character is a perfectly educated will.

  • Character is a wish for a perfect education.

  • Character is perfectly educated will.

  • Christianity is the root of all democracy, the highest fact in the rights of men.

  • Darwin remarks that we are less dazzled by the light at waking, if we have been dreaming of visible objects. Happy are those who have here dreamt of a higher vision! They will the sooner be able to endure the glories of the world to come.

  • Denotation by means of sounds and markings is a remarkable abstraction. Three letters designate God for me; several lines a million things. How easy becomes the manipulation of the universe here, how evident the concentration of the intellectual world! Language is the dynamics of the spiritual realm. One word of command moves armies; the word liberty entire nations.

  • Every disease is a musical problem; every cure is a musical solution.

  • Every stage of education begins with childhood. That is why the most educated person on earth so much resembles a child.

  • Everything at a distance turns into poetry; distant mountains, distant people, distant events; all become Romantic.

  • Everywhere we seek the Absolute, and always we find only things.

  • Fate and temperament are the names of a concept.

  • Friends , the soil is poor, we must sow seeds in plenty for us to garner even modest harvests .

  • How do we see physically? No differently that we do in our consciousness - by means of the productive power of imagination. Consciousness is the eye and ear, the sense for inner and outer meaning.

  • Humanity is a comic role.

  • Hypotheses are nets: only he who casts will catch.

  • Imagination places the future world for us either above or below or in reincarnation. We dream of travels throughout the universe: is not the universe within us? We do not know the depths of our spirit. The mysterious path leads within. In us, or nowhere, lies eternity with its worlds, the past and the future.

  • In cheerful souls there is no wit. Wit shows a disturbance of the equipoise.

  • It is certain my belief gains quite infinitely the very moment I can convince another mind thereof

  • It is not merely the multiplicity of tints, the gladness of tone, or the balminess of the air which delight in the spring; it is the still consecrated spirit of hope, the prophecy of happy days yet to come; the endless variety of nature, with presentiments of eternal flowers which never shall fade, and sympathy with the blessedness of the ever-developing world.

  • Life must not be a novel that is given to us, but one that is made by us.

  • Love works magic. It is the finalpurpose of the world story, the Amen of the universe.

  • Man is a sun, his senses are the planets.

  • Man is lyrical, woman epic, marriage dramatic.

  • Many books are longer than they seem. They have indeed no end. The boredom that they cause is truly absolute and infinite.

  • Many things are too delicate to be thought; many more, to be spoken.

  • Mathematics is the Life of the Gods.

  • Morality must be the heart of our existence, if it is to be what it wants to be for us. ... The highest form of philosophy is ethics. Thus all philosophy begins with "I am." The highest statement of cognition must be an expression of that fact which is the means and ground for all cognition, namely, the goal of the I.

  • Most observers of the French Revolution, especially the clever and noble ones, have explained it as a life-threatening and contagious illness. They have remained standing with the symptoms and have interpreted these in manifold and contrary ways. Some have regarded it as a merely local ill. The most ingenious opponents have pressed for castration. They well noticed that this alleged illness is nothing other than the crisis of beginning puberty.

  • Nature is an aeolian harp, a musical instrument whose tones are the re-echo of higher strings within us.

  • Not only England, but every Englishman is an island.

  • One can not understand language because language cannot understand itself; does not want to understand

  • One should, when overwhelmed by the shadow of a giant, move aside and see if the colossal shadow isn't merely that of a pygmy blocking out the sun.

  • Only the most perfect human being can design the most perfect philosophy.

  • Our bodies are molded rivers.

  • Philosophy can bake no bread; but she can procure for us God , Freedom , Immortality. Which, then, is more practical, Philosophy or Economy ?

  • Philosophy is really nostalgia, the desire to be at home.

  • Play is experimenting with chance.

  • Prayer is to religion what thinking is to philosophy. To pray is to make religion.

  • The art of writing books is not yet invented. But it is at the point of being invented. Fragments of this nature are literary seeds. There may be many an infertile grain among them: nevertheless, if only some come up!

  • The badge of honesty is simplicity.

  • The best thing about the sciences is their philosophical ingredient, like life for an organic body. If one dephilosophizes the sciences, what remains left? Earth , air , and [[water.

  • The Bible begins gloriously with Paradise, the symbol of youth, and ends with the everlasting kingdom, with the holy city. The history of every man should be a Bible.

  • The brains -the thinking organs- are the world producers -nature's genitals.

  • The individual soul should seek for an intimate union with the soul of the universe.

  • The mysterious path goes inward. It is in us, and not anywhere else, where the eternity of the worlds, the past and the future are found.

  • The normal present connects the past and the future through limitation. Contiguity results, crystallization by means of solidification. There also exists, however, a spiritual present that identifies past and future through dissolution, and this mixture is the element, the atmosphere of the poet.

  • The poem of the understanding is philosophy.

  • The seat of the soul is where the inner world and the outer world meet. Where they overlap, it is in every point of the overlap.

  • The true Poet is all-knowing; he is an actual world in miniature.

  • The world must be romanticized. In this way the originary meaning may be found again.

  • The world must become romanticized, and in that way we find again its original meaning for us.

  • There is but one temple in the universe, and that is the body of man.

  • There is but one temple in the world, and that is the body of man. Nothing is holier than this high form. Bending before men is a reverence done to this revelation in the flesh. We touch heaven when we lay our hand on a human body.

  • To get to know a truth properly, one must polemicize it.

  • To know a truth well, one must have fought it out.

  • To philosophize means to make vivid.

  • To romanticize the world is to make us aware of the magic, mystery and wonder of the world; it is to educate the senses to see the ordinary as extraordinary, the familiar as strange, the mundane as sacred, the finite as infinite.

  • Tools arm the man. One can well say that man is capable of bringing forth a world; he lacks only the necessary apparatus, the corresponding armature of his sensory tools. The beginning is there. Thus the principle of a warship lies in the idea of the shipbuilder, who is able to incorporate this thought by making himself into a gigantic machine, as it were, through a mass of men and appropriate tools and materials. Thus the idea of a moment often required monstrous organs, monstrous masses of materials, and man is therefore a potential, if not an actual creator.

  • We are more closely connected to the invisible than to the visible.

  • We are near awakening when we dream that we dream.

  • We are on a mission: we are called to the cultivation of the earth .

  • We never completely comprehend ourselves, but we can do far more than comprehend.

  • We touch heaven when we lay our hand on a human body!

  • What delights, what pleasures does your life offer you that outweigh the raptures of death?

  • Where are we really going? Always home.

  • You are alone with everything you love.

  • When you understand how to love one thing, then you also understand how to love everything.

  • There is an energy which springs from sickness and debility: it has a more powerful effect than the real, but, sadly, expires in an even greater infirmity.

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