Peter Wessel Zapffe quotes:

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  • Jesus must have been a psychopath

  • Mankind ought to end its existence of its own will.

  • To bear children into this world is like carrying wood to a burning house.

  • The immediate facts are what we must relate to. Darkness and light, beginning and end.

  • The more a human being in his worldview approaches the goal, the hegemony of love in a moral universe, the more has he become slipshod in the light of intellectual honesty.

  • Know yourselves- be infertile and let the earth be silent after ye.

  • A coin is turned around before it is handed to the beggar, yet a child is unflinchingly tossed into cosmic bruteness.

  • As long as humankind recklessly proceeds in the fateful delusion of being biologically fated for triumph, nothing essential will change.

  • For me, a desert island is no tragedy, neither is a deserted planet.

  • If one regards life and death as natural processes, the metaphysical dread vanishes, and one obtains peace of mind.

  • In accordance with my conception of life, I have chosen not to bring children into the world. A coin is examined, and only after careful deliberation, given to a beggar, whereas a child is flung out into the cosmic brutality without hesitation.

  • Man beholds the earth, and it is breathing like a great lung; whenever it exhales, delightful life swarms from all its pores and reaches out toward the sun, but when it inhales, a moan of rupture passes through the multitude, and corpses whip the ground like bouts of hail.

  • Man is a tragic animal. Not because of his smallness, but because he is too well endowed. Man has longings and spiritual demands that reality cannot fulfill. We have expectations of a just and moral world. Man requires meaning in a meaningless world.

  • The seed of a metaphysical or religious defeat is in us all. For the honest questioner, however, who doesn't seek refuge in some faith or fantasy, there will never be an answer.

  • The tragedy of a species becoming unfit for life by over-evolving one ability is not confined to humankind. Thus it is thought, for instance, that certain deer in paleontological times succumbed as they acquired overly-heavy horns. The mutations must be considered blind, they work, are thrown forth, without any contact of interest with their environment. In depressive states, the mind may be seen in the image of such an antler, in all its fantastic splendour pinning its bearer to the ground.

  • When a human being takes his life in depression, this is a natural death of spiritual causes. The modern barbarity of 'saving' the suicidal is based on a hair-raising misapprehension of the nature of existence.

  • We come from an inconceivable nothingness. We stay a while in something which seems equally inconceivable, only to vanish again into the inconceivable nothingness.

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