"In morality, man treats himself not as..." - Quote by Friedrich Nietzsche
In morality, man treats himself not as individuum but as dividuum.
More by Friedrich Nietzsche
“Happiness is a fata morgana. the only way to not end up unhappy is to not long for happiness.”
“We want to be poets of our life first of all in the smallest most everyday matters.”
“Where there is happiness, there is found pleasure in nonsense. The transformation of experience into its opposite, of the suitable into the unsuitable, the obligatory into the optional (but in such a manner that this process produces no injury and is only imagined in jest), is a pleasure.”
More on Morality
“Sooner or later we have all to pay for what we do.”
“Justice, and only justice, shall always be our motto.”
“Miss Prism: Do not speak slightingly of the three-volume novel, Cecily. I wrote one myself in earlier days. Cecily: Did you really, Miss Prism? How wonderfully clever you are! I hope it did not end happily? I don't like novels that end happily. They depress me so much. Miss Prism: The good ended happily, and the bad unhappily. That is what fiction means.”
More on Self
“I need solitude, which is to say, recovery, return to my self, the breath of a free, light, playful air.”
“Everyone is the fabric and structure of existence.”
“Nature, body, mind go to death, not we. We neither go nor come. The man Vivekananda is in nature, is born and dies. But the Self we see as Vivekananda is never born and never dies. It is the eternal and unchangeable Reality.”