Search
Search
“The more mobility and elasticity a man has, the less he values the ordinary equilibrium of his body;…”

Date

source

share

“The more mobility and elasticity a man has, the less he values the ordinary equilibrium of his body; the oftener he changes his outlook, the more he will take in. If, on the other hand, he imagines that from this . . .

“The more mobility and elasticity a man has, the less he values the ordinary equilibrium of his body; the oftener he changes his outlook, the more he will take in. If, on the other hand, he imagines that from this or the other pinnacle he has the most comfortable survey of the world and life, leave him alone; he will never know anything. Nay, he does not want to know, he cares more about his personal convenience than about the quality of his work. No doubt he will attain to fame and success, and thus brilliantly justify his “point of view.””

Lev Shestov, All Things Are Possible

Read the full article which is published on Philosophy Bits (external link)

More
articles

More
news

Writing Matters

Does writing have a future? This eerily prophetic question was posed by media theorist and phenomenologist Vilém Flusser back in...

Ethics in Business, James Murphy

Several years ago, I took over teaching an interdisciplinary elective in the Management Department at Loyola’s Quinlan School of Business...