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Single Idea 19645

[filed under theme 1. Philosophy / B. History of Ideas / 1. History of Ideas ]

Full Idea

A Kierkegaard, a Nietzsche, had they appeared in the most anodyne age, would have had no less tremulous, no less incendiary an inspiration.

Gist of Idea

Some thinkers would have been just as dynamic, no matter when they had lived

Source

E.M. Cioran (A Short History of Decay [1949], 6 'Truths')

Book Ref

Cioran,E.M.: 'A Short History of Decay', ed/tr. Howard,Richard [Penguin 2010], p.180


A Reaction

He is saying that some (only some) thinkers are independent of the age and culture in which they live. Personally I think of those two as distinctive products of a romantic age. Diogenes of Sinope seems a bit of a misfit!


The 47 ideas from 'A Short History of Decay'

Opportunists can save a nation, and heroes can ruin it [Cioran]
The pointlessness of our motives and irrelevance of our gestures reveals our vacuity [Cioran]
You are stuck in the past if you don't know boredom [Cioran]
To live authentically, we must see that philosophy is totally useless [Cioran]
I abandoned philosophy because it didn't acknowledge melancholy and human weakness [Cioran]
Originality in philosophy is just the invention of terms [Cioran]
Great systems of philosophy are just brilliant tautologies [Cioran]
Intelligence only fully flourishes at the end of a historical period [Cioran]
The ideal is to impose a religion by force, and then live in doubt about its beliefs [Cioran]
I want to suppress in myself the normal reasons people have for action [Cioran]
Lovers are hateful, apart from their hovering awareness of death [Cioran]
Ideas are neutral, but people fill them with passion and weakness [Cioran]
When man abandons religion, he then follows new fake gods and mythologies [Cioran]
Circles of hell are ridiculous; all that matters is to be there [Cioran]
As the perfect wisdom of detachment, philosophy offers no rivals to Taoism [Cioran]
Evidence suggests that humans do not have a purpose [Cioran]
No one has ever found a good argument against suicide [Cioran]
Religions see suicide as insubordination [Cioran]
Our instincts had to be blunted and diminished, to make way for consciousness! [Cioran]
Why is God so boring, and why does God resemble humanity so little? [Cioran]
Despite endless suggestions, no one has found a goal for history [Cioran]
Unlike other creatures, mankind seems lost in nature [Cioran]
We can only live because our imagination and memory are poor [Cioran]
It is pointless to refuse or accept the social order; we must endure it like the weather [Cioran]
The universe is dirty and fragile, as if a scandal in nothingness had produced its matter [Cioran]
Wisdom is just the last gasp of a dying civilization [Cioran]
Life is now more dreaded than death [Cioran]
If you have not contemplated suicide, you are a miserable worm [Cioran]
We use concepts to master our fears; saying 'death' releases us from confronting it [Cioran]
At a civilisation's peak values are all that matters, and people unconsciously live by them [Cioran]
The history of ideas (and deeds) occurs in a meaningless environment [Cioran]
A nation gives expression to its sum of values, and is then exhausted [Cioran]
An axiom has no more authority than a frenzy [Cioran]
No great idea ever emerged from a dialogue [Cioran]
Man is never himself; he always aims at less than life, or more than life [Cioran]
Truth is just an error insufficiently experienced [Cioran]
History is wonderfully devoid of meaning [Cioran]
If you lack beliefs, boredom is your martyrdom [Cioran]
No one is brave enough to say they don't want to do anything; we despise such a view [Cioran]
Some thinkers would have been just as dynamic, no matter when they had lived [Cioran]
Metaphysics is a universalisation of physical anguish [Cioran]
Eventually every 'truth' is guaranteed by the police [Cioran]
History is the bloody rejection of boredom [Cioran]
A religion needs to motivate killings, and cannot tolerate rivals [Cioran]
Values don't accumulate; they are ruthlessly replaced [Cioran]
We all need sexual secrets! [Cioran]
The mind is superficial, only concerned with the arrangement of events, not their significance [Cioran]