Название | The Essays of Arthur Schopenhauer; Counsels and Maxims |
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Автор произведения | Артур Шопенгауэр |
Жанр | Философия |
Серия | |
Издательство | Философия |
Год выпуска | 0 |
isbn |
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I refer to the proverbs and maxims ascribed, in the Old Testament, to the king of that name.
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vii. (12) 12.
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Welt als Wille und Vorstellung. Vol. I., p. 58.
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Welt als Wille und Vorstellung, vol. ii., ch. 16.
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Letters to and from Merck.
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1
I refer to the proverbs and maxims ascribed, in the Old Testament, to the king of that name.
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vii. (12) 12.
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Letters to and from Merck.
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Horace. Odes II. x.
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Odes II. xi.
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As our body is concealed by the clothes we wear, so our mind is veiled in lies. The veil is always there, and it is only through it that we can sometimes guess at what a man really thinks; just as from his clothes we arrive at the general shape of his body.
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It is a well-known fact, that we can more easily bear up under evils which fall upon a great many people besides ourselves. As boredom seems to be an evil of this kind, people band together to offer it a common resistance. The love of life is at bottom only the fear of death; and, in the same way, the social impulse does not rest directly upon the love of society, but upon the fear of solitude; it is not alone the charm of being in others' company that people seek, it is the dreary oppression of being alone – the monotony of their own consciousness – that they would avoid. They will do anything to escape it, – even tolerate bad companions, and put up with the feeling of constraint which all society involves, in this case a very burdensome one. But if aversion to such society conquers the aversion to being alone, they become accustomed to solitude and hardened to its immediate effects. They no longer find solitude to be such a very bad thing, and settle down comfortably to it without any hankering after society; – and this, partly because it is only indirectly that they need others' company, and partly because they have become accustomed to the benefits of being alone.
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Psalms, lv. 7.
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Goethe's