“The most important symptom of tact derives from this respect for the individuality of oneself and others: sensitivity. It is the only way possible to construct pleasant sociable interactions, as it never permits too much closeness nor too much distance. Everything explicit, every eruptive honesty, is avoided. Untruth which succors is always better than truth which damages; however, a bindingness which does not bind is the best. In this sphere there should be neither good nor evil, neither truth nor error, but only the value of beneficence - the hygiene of the greatest possible nurturance. Only the barbaric person lets himself be deceived by flattery and lets himself be surrounded by the fog of politeness, only to curse the world so spoiled. Let us imagine just for a second what interaction between persons who barely know each other and yet who say what they think or even assume about the other is like: After a quick collision, the coldness of outer space would descend upon them.”
Quote by Helmuth Plessner
Work
Grenzen der Gemeinschaft
Browse quotes and source details for this work. more
Author
You May Also Like
Source: The Doll: The Lost Short Stories
“No woman would be such a fool as to tell the truth to a man.”
Source: The Sentimentalists
“I wasn't born with the gift of sight, only the promise of vision.”
Source: In Search of The Music Man
Source: If I Was Your Girl
“No, but has the tyranny of facts ever stopped me before? Again, no.”
Source: Here for It; Or, How to Save Your Soul in America: Essays
Source: The Darkest Assassin
“Lend me your ears and you can borrow my mind”
Source: The King of Rhyme