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Because of lies, we can produce and invent a possible world.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Our life is full of empty space.
-- Umberto Eco
%
To read a paper book is another experience: you can do it on a ship, on the branch of a tree, on your bed, even if there is a blackout.
-- Umberto Eco
%
I have come to believe that the whole world is an enigma, a harmless enigma that is made terrible by our own mad attempt to interpret it as though it had an underlying truth.
-- Umberto Eco
%
The real hero is always a hero by mistake; he dreams of being an honest coward like everybody else.
-- Umberto Eco
%
A book is a fragile creature, it suffers the wear of time, it fears rodents, the elements and clumsy hands. so the librarian protects the books not only against mankind but also against nature and devotes his life to this war with the forces of oblivion.
-- Umberto Eco
%
In the United States there's a Puritan ethic and a mythology of success. He who is successful is good. In Latin countries, in Catholic countries, a successful person is a sinner.
-- Umberto Eco
%
People are tired of simple things. They want to be challenged.
-- Umberto Eco
%
I could work in the shower if I had plastic paper.
-- Umberto Eco
%
When the poet is in love, he is incapable of writing poetry on love. He has to write when he remembers that he was in love.
-- Umberto Eco
%
My maternal grandmother - she was a compulsive reader. She had only been through five grades of elementary school, but she was a member of the municipal library, and she brought home two or three books a week for me. They could be dime novels or Balzac.
-- Umberto Eco
%
To play the trumpet, you must train your lips for a long time. When I was twelve or thirteen I was a good player, but I lost the skill and now I play very badly. I do it every day even so. The reason is that I want to return to my childhood. For me, the trumpet is evidence of the sort of young man I was.
-- Umberto Eco
%
A secret is powerful when it is empty.
-- Umberto Eco
%
The mobile phone... is a tool for those whose professions require a fast response, such as doctors or plumbers.
-- Umberto Eco
%
You die, but most of what you have accumulated will not be lost; you are leaving a message in a bottle.
-- Umberto Eco
%
But now I have come to believe that the whole world is an enigma, a harmless enigma that is made terrible by our own mad attempt to interpret it as though it had an underlying truth.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Translation is the art of failure.
-- Umberto Eco
%
When men stop believing in God, it isn't that they then believe in nothing: they believe in everything.
-- Umberto Eco
%
What does culture want? To make infinity comprehensible.
-- Umberto Eco
%
We have a limit, a very discouraging, humiliating limit: death.
-- Umberto Eco
%
I started to work in television for three or four years, in 1954. There was one channel of television, black and white. But it could be entertaining and educational. During the evening they showed important plays, opera or Shakespeare's tragedies.
-- Umberto Eco
%
The United States needed a civil war to unite properly.
-- Umberto Eco
%
When someone has to intervene to defend the liberty of the press, that society is sick.
-- Umberto Eco
%
I think of myself as a serious professor who, during the weekend, writes novels.
-- Umberto Eco
%
The problem with the Internet is that it gives you everything - reliable material and crazy material. So the problem becomes, how do you discriminate?
-- Umberto Eco
%
Musical compositions can be very sad - Chopin - but you have the pleasure of this sadness. The cheap consolation is: you will be happy. The higher consolation is the pleasure and recognition of your unhappiness, the pleasure of having recognised that fate, destiny and life are such as they are and so you reach a higher form of consciousness.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Sometimes you say things with a smile with the precise intention of making it clear that you are not being serious, and are only kidding. If I salute a friend with a smile and say, 'How are you, you old scoundrel!' clearly I don't really mean he's a scoundrel.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Semiotics is a general theory of all existing languages... all forms of communication - visual, tactile, and so on... There is general semiotics, which is a philosophical approach to this field, and then there are many specific semiotics.
-- Umberto Eco
%
The thought that all experience will be lost at the moment of my death makes me feel pain and fear... What a waste, decades spent building up experience, only to throw it all away... We remedy this sadness by working. For example, by writing, painting, or building cities.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Certainly, light fiction exists and encompasses mysteries or second-class romance novels, books that are read on the beach, whose only aim is to entertain. These books are not concerned with style or creativity - instead they are successful because they are repetitive and follow a template that readers enjoy.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Nothing gives a fearful man more courage than another's fear.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Perhaps the mission of those who love mankind is to make people laugh at the truth, to make truth laugh, because the only truth lies in learning to free ourselves from insane passion for the truth.
-- Umberto Eco
%
How does a person feel when looking at the sky? He thinks that he doesn't have enough tongues to describe what he sees. Nevertheless, people have never stopping describing the sky, simply listing what they see.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Captain Cook discovered Australia looking for the Terra Incognita. Christopher Columbus thought he was finding India but discovered America. History is full of events that happened because of an imaginary tale.
-- Umberto Eco
%
The function of memory is not only to preserve, but also to throw away. If you remembered everything from your entire life, you would be sick.
-- Umberto Eco
%
There are books on our shelves we haven't read and doubtless never will, that each of us has probably put to one side in the belief that we will read them later on, perhaps even in another life.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Better reality than a dream: if something is real, then it's real and you're not to blame.
-- Umberto Eco
%
We invented the car, and it made it easier for us to crash and die. If I gave a car to my grandfather, he would die in five minutes, while I have grown up slowly to accept speed.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Entering a novel is like going on a climb in the mountains: You have to learn the rhythms of respiration - acquire the pace. Otherwise you stop right away.
-- Umberto Eco
%
A dream is a scripture, and many scriptures are nothing but dreams.
-- Umberto Eco
%
The comic is the perception of the opposite; humor is the feeling of it.
-- Umberto Eco
%
I don't see the point of having 80 million people online if all they are doing in the end is talking to ghosts in the suburbs.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Creativity can only be anarchic, capitalist, Darwinian.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Perhaps I am not as wise as I like to think I am.
-- Umberto Eco
%
The most interesting letters I received about 'The Name of the Rose' were from people in the Midwest that maybe didn't understand exactly, but wanted to understand more and who were excited by this picture of a world which was not their own.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Every European goes on the streets and sees medieval churches. Not if you live in Indianapolis. The most exciting letters I received were from people in places like that.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Young people do not watch television; they are on the Internet.
-- Umberto Eco
%
I think a book should be judged 10 years later, after reading and re-reading it.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Every European goes on the streets and sees medieval churches. Not if you live in Indianapolis.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Today, political events are nullified unless they're on TV.
-- Umberto Eco
%
The book is like the spoon, scissors, the hammer, the wheel. Once invented, it cannot be improved. You cannot make a spoon that is better than a spoon... The book has been thoroughly tested, and it's very hard to see how it could be improved on for its current purposes.
-- Umberto Eco
%
The Enlightenment, the Age of Reason, is seen as the beginning of modern depravity.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Many people who no longer go to church end up falling prey to superstition.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Beauty is boring because it is predictable.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Even today, I frequently meet scientists who, outside their own narrow discipline, are superstitious.
-- Umberto Eco
%
I like nicotine because it excites my brain and helps me work.
-- Umberto Eco
%
If people buy my books for vanity, I consider it a tax on idiocy.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Homer's work hits again and again on the topos of the inexpressible. People will always do that.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Narrativity presumes a special taste for plot. And this taste for plot was always very present in the Anglo-Saxon countries and that explains their high quality of detective novels.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Followers of the occult believe in only what they already know, and in those things that confirm what they have already learned.
-- Umberto Eco
%
I developed a passion for the Middle Ages the same way some people develop a passion for coconuts.
-- Umberto Eco
%
It is a myth of publishers that people want to read easy things.
-- Umberto Eco
%
There is nothing more difficult to define than an aphorism.
-- Umberto Eco
%
I have lost the freedom of not having an opinion.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Media populism means appealing to people directly through media. A politician who can master the media can shape political affairs outside of parliament and even eliminate the mediation of parliament.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Libraries can take the place of God.
-- Umberto Eco
%
We are never racist against somebody who is very far away. I don't know any racism against the Eskimos. To have a racist feeling, there must be an other who is slightly different from us - but is living close to us.
-- Umberto Eco
%
One can be a great poet and be politically stupid.
-- Umberto Eco
%
I have to admit that I only read 'War and Peace' when I was 40. But I knew the basics before then.
-- Umberto Eco
%
All the religious wars that have caused blood to be shed for centuries arise from passionate feelings and facile counter-positions, such as Us and Them, good and bad, white and black.
-- Umberto Eco
%
If western culture is shown to be rich, it is because, even before the Enlightenment, it has tried to 'dissolve' harmful simplifications through inquiry and the critical mind.
-- Umberto Eco
%
The question of manuscript changes is very important for literary criticism, the psychology of creation and other aspects of the study of literature.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Fear prophets and those prepared to die for the truth, for as a rule they make many others die with them, often before them, at times instead of them.
-- Umberto Eco
%
We like lists because we don't want to die.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Every time that I write a novel I am convinced for at least two years that it is the last one, because a novel is like a child. It takes two years after its birth. You have to take care of it. It starts walking, and then speaking.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Religion has nothing to do with God. It's a fundamental attitude of human beings, who ask about the origins of life and what happens after death. For many, the answer is a personal god. In my opinion, it's religion that produces God, not the other way round.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Dan Brown is a character from 'Foucault's Pendulum!' I invented him. He shares my characters' fascinations - the world conspiracy of Rosicrucians, Masons, and Jesuits. The role of the Knights Templar. The hermetic secret. The principle that everything is connected. I suspect Dan Brown might not even exist.
-- Umberto Eco
%
History is rich with adventurous men, long on charisma, with a highly developed instinct for their own interests, who have pursued personal power - bypassing parliaments and constitutions, distributing favours to their minions, and conflating their own desires with the interests of the community.
-- Umberto Eco
%
When one starts writing a book, especially a novel, even the humblest person in the world hopes to become Homer.
-- Umberto Eco
%
The good of a book lies in its being read. A book is made up of signs that speak of other signs, which in their turn speak of things. Without an eye to read them, a book contains signs that produce no concepts; therefore it is dumb.
-- Umberto Eco
%
As an adolescent I wrote comic books, because I read lots of them, and fantasy novels set in Malaysia and Central Africa.
-- Umberto Eco
%
But Italy is not an intellectual country. On the subway in Tokyo everybody reads. In Italy, they don't. Don't evaluate Italy from the fact that it produced Raphael and Michelangelo.
-- Umberto Eco
%
When I went from being an academic to being a member of the community of writers some of my former colleagues did look on me with a certain resentment.
-- Umberto Eco
%
I think every professor and writer is in some way an exhibitionist because his or her normal activity is a theatrical one. When you give a lesson the situation is the same as writing a book. You have to capture the attention, the complicity of your audience.
-- Umberto Eco
%
With all of its defects, the global market makes war less likely, even between the U.S.A. and China.
-- Umberto Eco
%
A transposable aphorism is a malaise of the urge to be witty, or in other words, a maxim that is untroubled by the fact that the opposite of what it says is equally true so long as it appears to be funny.
-- Umberto Eco
%
The court jester had the right to say the most outrageous things to the king. Everything was permitted during carnival, even the songs that the Roman legionnaires would sing, calling Julius Caesar 'queen,' alluding, in a very transparent way, to his real, or presumed, homosexual escapades.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Conspiracies do exist. Probably in this moment in New York there is an economic group making a conspiracy in order to buy three banks. But if they succeed, they are immediately discovered.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Does the novel have to deepen the psychology of its heroes? Certainly the modern novel does, but the ancient legends did not do the same. Oedipus' psychology was deduced by Aeschylus or Freud, but the character is simply there, fixed in a pure and terribly disquieting state.
-- Umberto Eco
%
It is sometimes hard to grasp the difference between identifying with one's own roots, understanding people with other roots, and judging what is good or bad.
-- Umberto Eco
%
We are a pluralist civilisation because we allow mosques to be built in our countries, and we are not going to stop simply because Christian missionaries are thrown into prison in Kabul. If we did so, we, too, would become Taliban.
-- Umberto Eco
%
I would define the poetic effect as the capacity that a text displays for continuing to generate different readings, without ever being completely consumed.
-- Umberto Eco
%
There is no great sport in having bullets flying about one in every direction, but I find they have less horror when among them than when in anticipation.
-- Umberto Eco
%
My father was an accountant and his father was a typographer.
-- Umberto Eco
%
My grandfather had a particularly important influence on my life, even though I didn't visit him often, since he lived about three miles out of town and he died when I was six. He was remarkably curious about the world, and he read lots of books.
-- Umberto Eco
%
From lies to forgeries the step is not so long, and I have written technical essays on the logic of forgeries and on the influence of forgeries on history.
-- Umberto Eco
%
After years of practice, I can walk into a bookstore and understand its layout in a few seconds. I can glance at the spine of a book and make a good guess at its content from a number of signs.
-- Umberto Eco
%
It comes down to a question of attention: it's difficult to use the Net distractedly, unlike the television or the radio.
-- Umberto Eco
%
There are more people than you think who want to have a challenging experience, in which they are obliged to reflect about the past.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Berlusconi is a genius in communication. Otherwise, he would never have become so rich.
-- Umberto Eco
%
It is clear that when you write a story that takes place in the past, you try to show what really happened in those times. But you are always moved by the suspicion that you are also showing something about our contemporary world.
-- Umberto Eco
%
The French, the Italians, the Germans, the Spanish and the English have spent centuries killing each other.
-- Umberto Eco
%
The grandeur of Jerusalem is also... its problem.
-- Umberto Eco
%
I love the secrecy of writing fiction. When I write a novel, I don't tell anybody what I'm doing. I'm living in my private world. And it's a great sensation.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Poetry is not a matter of feelings, it is a matter of language. It is language which creates feelings.
-- Umberto Eco
%
If somebody writes a book and doesn't care for the survival of that book, he's an imbecile.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Political satire is a serious thing. In democratic newspapers throughout the world there are daily cartoons that often are not even funny, as is the case especially in many English-language newspapers. Instead, they contain a political message, and the artist takes full responsibility.
-- Umberto Eco
%
As a scholar I am interested in the philosophy of language, semiotics, call it what you want, and one of the main features of the human language is the possibility of lying.
-- Umberto Eco
%
I write what I write.
-- Umberto Eco
%
At a certain moment, I decided to write a story. I had no more small children to tell them stories.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Human beings are religious animals.
-- Umberto Eco
%
It is psychologically very hard to go through life without the justification, and the hope, provided by religion.
-- Umberto Eco
%
The author may not interpret. But he must tell why and how he wrote his book.
-- Umberto Eco
%
I don't want to write a novel per year. I know that I need a break of one or two years. So maybe I invent some new, urgent activity so I don't fall into the trap of starting a new novel.
-- Umberto Eco
%
I feel that I am a scholar who only with the left hand writes novels.
-- Umberto Eco
%
Our most noted satirists are true columnists, and their opinions can be worth more than any well-documented expose.
-- Umberto Eco
%
I was a fervent Catholic, and I belonged to the national organizations, even becoming one of the national leaders, until the age of 21, 22.
-- Umberto Eco
%
There are more books in the world than hours in which to read them. We are thus deeply influenced by books we haven't read, that we haven't had the time to read.
-- Umberto Eco
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There is only one corner of the universe you can be certain of improving, and that's your own self.
-- Aldous Huxley
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After silence, that which comes nearest to expressing the inexpressible is music.
-- Aldous Huxley
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The secret of genius is to carry the spirit of the child into old age, which means never losing your enthusiasm.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Technological progress has merely provided us with more efficient means for going backwards.
-- Aldous Huxley
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My fate cannot be mastered; it can only be collaborated with and thereby, to some extent, directed. Nor am I the captain of my soul; I am only its noisiest passenger.
-- Aldous Huxley
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That men do not learn very much from the lessons of history is the most important of all the lessons of history.
-- Aldous Huxley
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You shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you mad.
-- Aldous Huxley
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There are things known and there are things unknown, and in between are the doors of perception.
-- Aldous Huxley
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The most valuable of all education is the ability to make yourself do the thing you have to do, when it has to be done, whether you like it or not.
-- Aldous Huxley
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A belief in hell and the knowledge that every ambition is doomed to frustration at the hands of a skeleton have never prevented the majority of human beings from behaving as though death were no more than an unfounded rumor.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Happiness is a hard master, particularly other people's happiness.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Children are remarkable for their intelligence and ardor, for their curiosity, their intolerance of shams, the clarity and ruthlessness of their vision.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Consistency is contrary to nature, contrary to life. The only completely consistent people are dead.
-- Aldous Huxley
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A democracy which makes or even effectively prepares for modern, scientific war must necessarily cease to be democratic. No country can be really well prepared for modern war unless it is governed by a tyrant, at the head of a highly trained and perfectly obedient bureaucracy.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Hell isn't merely paved with good intentions; it's walled and roofed with them. Yes, and furnished too.
-- Aldous Huxley
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The impulse to cruelty is, in many people, almost as violent as the impulse to sexual love - almost as violent and much more mischievous.
-- Aldous Huxley
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God isn't compatible with machinery and scientific medicine and universal happiness. You must make your choice. Our civilization has chosen machinery and medicine and happiness.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Most ignorance is vincible ignorance. We don't know because we don't want to know.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Maybe this world is another planet's hell.
-- Aldous Huxley
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My father considered a walk among the mountains as the equivalent of churchgoing.
-- Aldous Huxley
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There isn't any formula or method. You learn to love by loving - by paying attention and doing what one thereby discovers has to be done.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Beauty is worse than wine, it intoxicates both the holder and beholder.
-- Aldous Huxley
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That we are not much sicker and much madder than we are is due exclusively to that most blessed and blessing of all natural graces, sleep.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Your true traveller finds boredom rather agreeable than painful. It is the symbol of his liberty - his excessive freedom. He accepts his boredom, when it comes, not merely philosophically, but almost with pleasure.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Proverbs are always platitudes until you have personally experienced the truth of them.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored.
-- Aldous Huxley
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The propagandist's purpose is to make one set of people forget that certain other sets of people are human.
-- Aldous Huxley
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The worst enemy of life, freedom and the common decencies is total anarchy; their second worst enemy is total efficiency.
-- Aldous Huxley
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The more powerful and original a mind, the more it will incline towards the religion of solitude.
-- Aldous Huxley
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You should hurry up and acquire the cigar habit. It's one of the major happinesses. And so much more lasting than love, so much less costly in emotional wear and tear.
-- Aldous Huxley
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It was one of those evenings when men feel that truth, goodness and beauty are one. In the morning, when they commit their discovery to paper, when others read it written there, it looks wholly ridiculous.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Experience is not what happens to you; it's what you do with what happens to you.
-- Aldous Huxley
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A child-like man is not a man whose development has been arrested; on the contrary, he is a man who has given himself a chance of continuing to develop long after most adults have muffled themselves in the cocoon of middle-aged habit and convention.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Great is truth, but still greater, from a practical point of view, is silence about truth. By simply not mentioning certain subjects... totalitarian propagandists have influenced opinion much more effectively than they could have by the most eloquent denunciations.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Everyone who wants to do good to the human race always ends in universal bullying.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Sons have always a rebellious wish to be disillusioned by that which charmed their fathers.
-- Aldous Huxley
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The most shocking fact about war is that its victims and its instruments are individual human beings, and that these individual beings are condemned by the monstrous conventions of politics to murder or be murdered in quarrels not their own.
-- Aldous Huxley
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There's only one corner of the universe you can be certain of improving, and that's your own self.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Man is an intelligence in servitude to his organs.
-- Aldous Huxley
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The charm of history and its enigmatic lesson consist in the fact that, from age to age, nothing changes and yet everything is completely different.
-- Aldous Huxley
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To travel is to discover that everyone is wrong about other countries.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Every man who knows how to read has it in his power to magnify himself, to multiply the ways in which he exists, to make his life full, significant and interesting.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Dream in a pragmatic way.
-- Aldous Huxley
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The vast majority of human beings dislike and even actually dread all notions with which they are not familiar... Hence it comes about that at their first appearance innovators have generally been persecuted, and always derided as fools and madmen.
-- Aldous Huxley
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One of the great attractions of patriotism - it fulfills our worst wishes. In the person of our nation we are able, vicariously, to bully and cheat. Bully and cheat, what's more, with a feeling that we are profoundly virtuous.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Uncontrolled, the hunger and thirst after God may become an obstacle, cutting off the soul from what it desires. If a man would travel far along the mystic road, he must learn to desire God intensely but in stillness, passively and yet with all his heart and mind and strength.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Orthodoxy is the diehard of the world of thought. It learns not, neither can it forget.
-- Aldous Huxley
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An intellectual is a person who's found one thing that's more interesting than sex.
-- Aldous Huxley
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What is absurd and monstrous about war is that men who have no personal quarrel should be trained to murder one another in cold blood.
-- Aldous Huxley
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People intoxicate themselves with work so they won't see how they really are.
-- Aldous Huxley
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There's only one effectively redemptive sacrifice, the sacrifice of self-will to make room for the knowledge of God.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Perhaps it's good for one to suffer. Can an artist do anything if he's happy? Would he ever want to do anything? What is art, after all, but a protest against the horrible inclemency of life?
-- Aldous Huxley
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All gods are homemade, and it is we who pull their strings, and so, give them the power to pull ours.
-- Aldous Huxley
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I'm afraid of losing my obscurity. Genuineness only thrives in the dark. Like celery.
-- Aldous Huxley
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There is no substitute for talent. Industry and all its virtues are of no avail.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Words, words, words! They shut one off from the universe. Three quarters of the time one's never in contact with things, only with the beastly words that stand for them.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Most of one's life is one prolonged effort to prevent oneself thinking.
-- Aldous Huxley
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An unexciting truth may be eclipsed by a thrilling lie.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Man approaches the unattainable truth through a succession of errors.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Writers write to influence their readers, their preachers, their auditors, but always, at bottom, to be more themselves.
-- Aldous Huxley
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If human beings were shown what they're really like, they'd either kill one another as vermin, or hang themselves.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Every man's memory is his private literature.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Several excuses are always less convincing than one.
-- Aldous Huxley
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The finest works of art are precious, among other reasons, because they make it possible for us to know, if only imperfectly and for a little while, what it actually feels like to think subtly and feel nobly.
-- Aldous Huxley
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It's with bad sentiments that one makes good novels.
-- Aldous Huxley
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To his dog, every man is Napoleon; hence the constant popularity of dogs.
-- Aldous Huxley
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There is something curiously boring about somebody else's happiness.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Those who believe that they are exclusively in the right are generally those who achieve something.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Cynical realism is the intelligent man's best excuse for doing nothing in an intolerable situation.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Defined in psychological terms, a fanatic is a man who consciously over-compensates a secret doubt.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Europe is so well gardened that it resembles a work of art, a scientific theory, a neat metaphysical system. Man has re-created Europe in his own image.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Science has explained nothing; the more we know the more fantastic the world becomes and the profounder the surrounding darkness.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Men do not learn much from the lessons of history and that is the most important of all the lessons of history.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Experience teaches only the teachable.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Speed provides the one genuinely modern pleasure.
-- Aldous Huxley
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The quality of moral behavior varies in inverse ratio to the number of human beings involved.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Idealism is the noble toga that political gentlemen drape over their will to power.
-- Aldous Huxley
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A bad book is as much of a labor to write as a good one, it comes as sincerely from the author's soul.
-- Aldous Huxley
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So long as men worship the Caesars and Napoleons, Caesars and Napoleons will duly arise and make them miserable.
-- Aldous Huxley
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What with making their way and enjoying what they have won, heroes have no time to think. But the sons of heroes - ah, they have all the necessary leisure.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Most human beings have an almost infinite capacity for taking things for granted.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Like every man of sense and good feeling, I abominate work.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Chastity - the most unnatural of all the sexual perversions.
-- Aldous Huxley
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A fanatic is a man who consciously over compensates a secret doubt.
-- Aldous Huxley
%
Habit converts luxurious enjoyments into dull and daily necessities.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Official dignity tends to increase in inverse ratio to the importance of the country in which the office is held.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Feasts must be solemn and rare, or else they cease to be feasts.
-- Aldous Huxley
%
Bondage is the life of personality, and for bondage the personal self will fight with tireless resourcefulness and the most stubborn cunning.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Like every other good thing in this world, leisure and culture have to be paid for. Fortunately, however, it is not the leisured and the cultured who have to pay.
-- Aldous Huxley
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We participate in a tragedy; at a comedy we only look.
-- Aldous Huxley
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It is a bit embarrassing to have been concerned with the human problem all one's life and find at the end that one has no more to offer by way of advice than 'try to be a little kinder.'
-- Aldous Huxley
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Specialized meaninglessness has come to be regarded, in certain circles, as a kind of hallmark of true science.
-- Aldous Huxley
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The most distressing thing that can happen to a prophet is to be proved wrong. The next most distressing thing is to be proved right.
-- Aldous Huxley
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The proper study of mankind is books.
-- Aldous Huxley
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A man may be a pessimistic determinist before lunch and an optimistic believer in the will's freedom after it.
-- Aldous Huxley
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The author of the Iliad is either Homer or, if not Homer, somebody else of the same name.
-- Aldous Huxley
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What we feel and think and are is to a great extent determined by the state of our ductless glands and viscera.
-- Aldous Huxley
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That all men are equal is a proposition to which, at ordinary times, no sane human being has ever given his assent.
-- Aldous Huxley
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From their experience or from the recorded experience of others (history), men learn only what their passions and their metaphysical prejudices allow them to learn.
-- Aldous Huxley
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We are all geniuses up to the age of ten.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Thought must be divided against itself before it can come to any knowledge of itself.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Speed, it seems to me, provides the one genuinely modern pleasure.
-- Aldous Huxley
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De Sade is the one completely consistent and thoroughgoing revolutionary of history.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Amour is the one human activity of any importance in which laughter and pleasure preponderate, if ever so slightly, over misery and pain.
-- Aldous Huxley
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It takes two to make a murder. There are born victims, born to have their throats cut, as the cut-throats are born to be hanged.
-- Aldous Huxley
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Happiness can exist only in acceptance.
-- George Orwell
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Freedom is the right to tell people what they do not want to hear.
-- George Orwell
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Political language... is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.
-- George Orwell
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All political thinking for years past has been vitiated in the same way. People can foresee the future only when it coincides with their own wishes, and the most grossly obvious facts can be ignored when they are unwelcome.
-- George Orwell
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Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past.
-- George Orwell
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People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf.
-- George Orwell
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All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others.
-- George Orwell
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In our age there is no such thing as 'keeping out of politics.' All issues are political issues, and politics itself is a mass of lies, evasions, folly, hatred and schizophrenia.
-- George Orwell
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War is peace. Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is strength.
-- George Orwell
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We have now sunk to a depth at which restatement of the obvious is the first duty of intelligent men.
-- George Orwell
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Liberal: a power worshipper without power.
-- George Orwell
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If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear.
-- George Orwell
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So much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot.
-- George Orwell
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Man is the only creature that consumes without producing. He does not give milk, he does not lay eggs, he is too weak to pull the plough, he cannot run fast enough to catch rabbits. Yet he is lord of all the animals.
-- George Orwell
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Nationalism is power hunger tempered by self-deception.
-- George Orwell
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Serious sport has nothing to do with fair play. It is bound up with hatred, jealousy, boastfulness, disregard of all rules and sadistic pleasure in witnessing violence. In other words, it is war minus the shooting.
-- George Orwell
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Society has always to demand a little more from human beings than it will get in practice.
-- George Orwell
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War is a way of shattering to pieces... materials which might otherwise be used to make the masses too comfortable and... too intelligent.
-- George Orwell
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The very concept of objective truth is fading out of the world. Lies will pass into history.
-- George Orwell
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The essence of being human is that one does not seek perfection.
-- George Orwell
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What can you do against the lunatic who is more intelligent than yourself, who gives your arguments a fair hearing and then simply persists in his lunacy?
-- George Orwell
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Each generation imagines itself to be more intelligent than the one that went before it, and wiser than the one that comes after it.
-- George Orwell
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The great enemy of clear language is insincerity. When there is a gap between one's real and one's declared aims, one turns, as it were, instinctively to long words and exhausted idioms, like a cuttlefish squirting out ink.
-- George Orwell
%
Doublethink means the power of holding two contradictory beliefs in one's mind simultaneously, and accepting both of them.
-- George Orwell
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It is almost universally felt that when we call a country democratic we are praising it; consequently, the defenders of every kind of regime claim that it is a democracy, and fear that they might have to stop using the word if it were tied down to any one meaning.
-- George Orwell
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When it comes to the pinch, human beings are heroic.
-- George Orwell
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Prolonged, indiscriminate reviewing of books is a quite exceptionally thankless, irritating and exhausting job. It not only involves praising trash but constantly inventing reactions towards books about which one has no spontaneous feeling whatever.
-- George Orwell
%
The quickest way of ending a war is to lose it.
-- George Orwell
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There is hardly such a thing as a war in which it makes no difference who wins. Nearly always one side stands more or less for progress, the other side more or less for reaction.
-- George Orwell
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To an ordinary human being, love means nothing if it does not mean loving some people more than others.
-- George Orwell
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Every war when it comes, or before it comes, is represented not as a war but as an act of self-defense against a homicidal maniac.
-- George Orwell
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Myths which are believed in tend to become true.
-- George Orwell
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I doubt whether classical education ever has been or can be successfully carried out without corporal punishment.
-- George Orwell
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Dickens is one of those authors who are well worth stealing.
-- George Orwell
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As with the Christian religion, the worst advertisement for Socialism is its adherents.
-- George Orwell
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It is also true that one can write nothing readable unless one constantly struggles to efface one's own personality. Good prose is like a windowpane.
-- George Orwell
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Big Brother is watching you.
-- George Orwell
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The nationalist not only does not disapprove of atrocities committed by his own side, but he has a remarkable capacity for not even hearing about them.
-- George Orwell
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Whoever is winning at the moment will always seem to be invincible.
-- George Orwell
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I sometimes think that the price of liberty is not so much eternal vigilance as eternal dirt.
-- George Orwell
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Men can only be happy when they do not assume that the object of life is happiness.
-- George Orwell
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War against a foreign country only happens when the moneyed classes think they are going to profit from it.
-- George Orwell
%
Those who 'abjure' violence can do so only because others are committing violence on their behalf.
-- George Orwell
%
All the war-propaganda, all the screaming and lies and hatred, comes invariably from people who are not fighting.
-- George Orwell
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On the whole, human beings want to be good, but not too good, and not quite all the time.
-- George Orwell
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He was an embittered atheist, the sort of atheist who does not so much disbelieve in God as personally dislike Him.
-- George Orwell
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No one can look back on his schooldays and say with truth that they were altogether unhappy.
-- George Orwell
%
Not to expose your true feelings to an adult seems to be instinctive from the age of seven or eight onwards.
-- George Orwell
%
We of the sinking middle class may sink without further struggles into the working class where we belong, and probably when we get there it will not be so dreadful as we feared, for, after all, we have nothing to lose.
-- George Orwell
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Saints should always be judged guilty until they are proved innocent.
-- George Orwell
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Early in life I had noticed that no event is ever correctly reported in a newspaper.
-- George Orwell
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If you want a vision of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face - forever.
-- George Orwell
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Probably the battle of Waterloo was won on the playing-fields of Eton, but the opening battles of all subsequent wars have been lost there.
-- George Orwell
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Men are only as good as their technical development allows them to be.
-- George Orwell
%
Serious sport is war minus the shooting.
-- George Orwell
%
The Catholic and the Communist are alike in assuming that an opponent cannot be both honest and intelligent.
-- George Orwell
%
There are some ideas so wrong that only a very intelligent person could believe in them.
-- George Orwell
%
The best books... are those that tell you what you know already.
-- George Orwell
%
Whatever is funny is subversive, every joke is ultimately a custard pie... a dirty joke is a sort of mental rebellion.
-- George Orwell
%
Four legs good, two legs bad.
-- George Orwell
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The essential act of war is destruction, not necessarily of human lives, but of the products of human labor.
-- George Orwell
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Patriotism is usually stronger than class hatred, and always stronger than internationalism.
-- George Orwell
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The aim of a joke is not to degrade the human being, but to remind him that he is already degraded.
-- George Orwell
%
Enlightened people seldom or never possess a sense of responsibility.
-- George Orwell
%
I'm fat, but I'm thin inside... there's a thin man inside every fat man.
-- George Orwell
%
Power is not a means, it is an end. One does not establish a dictatorship in order to safeguard a revolution; one makes the revolution in order to establish the dictatorship.
-- George Orwell
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But if thought corrupts language, language can also corrupt thought.
-- George Orwell
%
If you have embraced a creed which appears to be free from the ordinary dirtiness of politics - a creed from which you yourself cannot expect to draw any material advantage - surely that proves that you are in the right?
-- George Orwell
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To walk through the ruined cities of Germany is to feel an actual doubt about the continuity of civilization.
-- George Orwell
%
Progress is not an illusion, it happens, but it is slow and invariably disappointing.
-- George Orwell
%
The atom bombs are piling up in the factories, the police are prowling through the cities, the lies are streaming from the loudspeakers, but the earth is still going round the sun.
-- George Orwell
%
One does not establish a dictatorship in order to safeguard a revolution; one makes a revolution in order to establish a dictatorship.
-- George Orwell
%
Sometimes the first duty of intelligent men is the restatement of the obvious.
-- George Orwell
%
Language ought to be the joint creation of poets and manual workers.
-- George Orwell
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Political chaos is connected with the decay of language... one can probably bring about some improvement by starting at the verbal end.
-- George Orwell
%
In our time political speech and writing are largely the defense of the indefensible.
-- George Orwell
%
A tragic situation exists precisely when virtue does not triumph but when it is still felt that man is nobler than the forces which destroy him.
-- George Orwell
%
For a creative writer possession of the 'truth' is less important than emotional sincerity.
-- George Orwell
%
War is evil, but it is often the lesser evil.
-- George Orwell
%
One cannot really be a Catholic and grown up.
-- George Orwell
%
At fifty everyone has the face he deserves.
-- George Orwell
%
We sleep safe in our beds because rough men stand ready in the night to visit violence on those who would do us harm.
-- George Orwell
%
To survive it is often necessary to fight and to fight you have to dirty yourself.
-- George Orwell
%
The atmosphere of orthodoxy is always damaging to prose, and above all it is completely ruinous to the novel, the most anarchical of all forms of literature.
-- George Orwell
%
War is war. The only good human being is a dead one.
-- George Orwell
%
Mankind is not likely to salvage civilization unless he can evolve a system of good and evil which is independent of heaven and hell.
-- George Orwell
%
Advertising is the rattling of a stick inside a swill bucket.
-- George Orwell
%
One can love a child, perhaps, more deeply than one can love another adult, but it is rash to assume that the child feels any love in return.
-- George Orwell
%
Part of the reason for the ugliness of adults, in a child's eyes, is that the child is usually looking upwards, and few faces are at their best when seen from below.
-- George Orwell
%
No advance in wealth, no softening of manners, no reform or revolution has ever brought human equality a millimeter nearer.
-- George Orwell
%
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- George Orwell
%
Most people get a fair amount of fun out of their lives, but on balance life is suffering, and only the very young or the very foolish imagine otherwise.
-- George Orwell
%
Good writing is like a windowpane.
-- George Orwell
%
Many people genuinely do not want to be saints, and it is probable that some who achieve or aspire to sainthood have never felt much temptation to be human beings.
-- George Orwell
%
As I write, highly civilized human beings are flying overhead, trying to kill me.
-- George Orwell
%
A family with the wrong members in control; that, perhaps, is as near as one can come to describing England in a phrase.
-- George Orwell
%
The intellectual is different from the ordinary man, but only in certain sections of his personality, and even then not all the time.
-- George Orwell
%
We may find in the long run that tinned food is a deadlier weapon than the machine-gun.
-- George Orwell
%
Oceania was at war with Eurasia; therefore Oceania had always been at war with Eurasia.
-- George Orwell
%
A dirty joke is a sort of mental rebellion.
-- George Orwell
%
Joyce is a poet and also an elephantine pedant.
-- George Orwell
%
Strange how paranoia can link up with reality now and then.
-- Philip K. Dick
%
The basic tool for the manipulation of reality is the manipulation of words. If you can control the meaning of words, you can control the people who must use the words.
-- Philip K. Dick
%
We live in a society in which spurious realities are manufactured by the media, by governments, by big corporations, by religious groups, political groups. I ask, in my writing, 'What is real?' Because unceasingly we are bombarded with pseudo realities manufactured by very sophisticated people using very sophisticated electronic mechanisms.
-- Philip K. Dick
%
The trouble with being educated is that it takes a long time; it uses up the better part of your life and when you are finished what you know is that you would have benefited more by going into banking.
-- Philip K. Dick
%
Don't try to solve serious matters in the middle of the night.
-- Philip K. Dick
%
It is sometimes an appropriate response to reality to go insane.
-- Philip K. Dick
%
The Martians are always coming.
-- Philip K. Dick
%
I dreamed: I am the fish whose flesh is eaten, and because I am fat, it is good.
-- Philip K. Dick
%
I want to write about people I love, and put them into a fictional world spun out of my own mind, not the world we actually have, because the world we actually have does not meet my standards.
-- Philip K. Dick
%
Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away.