Showing posts with label Rabindranath Tragore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rabindranath Tragore. Show all posts

Sunday, October 18, 2020

Thoughts for the Day: Sunday 18 October 2020

 



[Ernest] Becker’s book is really an elaboration on the psychology of self-esteem; death is the final blow to that and this is why we deny it. It also relates very closely to the idea of the Right Man. As mentioned, the Right Man is an idea developed by the science-fiction writer A. E. van Vogt. It describes a type of person—there are Right Women too—who under no circumstances can accept that he is wrong. His need for self-esteem is so great and his grasp of it is so tenuous that the slightest contradiction sends him into a rage. His belief in the absolute correctness of all of his actions is so unshakable—like the pope, he enjoys infallibility—that he treats any question of it as a personal betrayal.
SNG: Rings a bell? P.S. My review of this book.

Most people believe the mind to be a mirror, more or less accurately reflecting the world outside them, not realizing on the contrary that the mind is itself the principal element of creation. --Rabindranath Tagore

As the definite article indicates in the French Revolution, historians do not proceed from the classificatory term toward the general law but from the classificatory term toward the explanation of differences.
And by reflecting on it we can perhaps detect one more characteristic which art must have, if it is to forgo both, entertainment-value and magical value, and draw a subject-matter from its audience themselves. It must be prophetic.
Real conversations require utter concentration, not texting on the side when you are in a cafĂ© with someone. That is because travel is linear—it is about one place or singular perception or book at a time, each one etched deep into memory, so as to change your life forever.



Sunday, September 27, 2020

Thoughts for the Day: Sunday 27 September 2020

 


And if all others accepted the lie which the Party imposed—if all records told the same tale—then the lie passed into history and became truth. “Who controls the past,” ran the Party slogan, “controls the future: who controls the present controls the past.” And yet the past, though of its nature alterable, never had been altered. Whatever was true now was true from everlasting to everlasting. It was quite simple. All that was needed was an unending series of victories over your own memory. “Reality control,” they called it; in Newspeak, “doublethink.”

Man cannot endure his own littleness unless he can translate it into meaningfulness on the largest possible level.

--Ernest Becker

The most fateful consequence of mental time travel may be the understanding that we will all die.

--Michael Corballis

If you know others and know yourself, you’ll not be imperiled in a hundred battles.

--Sun Tzu

It is in the space of mastery over paradigms that people throw off addictions, live in constant joy, bring down empires, found religions, get locked up or ‘disappeared’ or shot, and have impacts that last for millennia.

--Donella Meadows

Most people believe the mind to be a mirror, more or less accurately reflecting the world outside them, not realizing on the contrary that the mind is itself the principal element of creation.

--Rabindranath Tagore