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Quote by Mark Slouka

“Pleasure and pain are immediate; knowledge, retrospective. A steel ball, suspended on a string, smacks into its brothers and nothing happens: no shock of recognition, no sudden epiphany. We go about our business, buttering the toast, choosing gray socks over brown. But here's the thing: just because we haven't understood something doesn't mean we haven't been shaped by it.”

Quote by Mark Slouka

Work

Essays from the Nick of Time: Reflections and Refutations

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Author

Mark Slouka
Mark Slouka

Mark Slouka is an American novelist born in 1958. His works often delve into the relationship between individuals and society, as well as the profound meaning of human existence. Slouka's novels are known for their deep insights and rich emotions. more

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“सदृशं चेष्टते स्वस्याः प्रकृतेर्ज्ञानवानपि। प्रकृतिं यान्ति भूतानि निग्रहः किं करिष्यति॥ ॥३- ३३॥ इन्द्रियस्येन्द्रियस्यार्थे रागद्वेषौ व्यवस्थितौ। तयोर्न वशमागच्छेत्तौ ह्यस्य परिपन्थिनौ॥ ॥३- ३४॥ `Each is prone to follow his nature, His senses stormed by earthly pleasure, Submit not to them they be your foe, Else you will reap what ever you sow.’ 3. 33-34”

“It is the thought that the least efficient way of of finding either happiness or pleasure is to pursue them. Put in terms of happiness, we can see it like this: To be happy you must quite literally "lose yourself". You must lose yourself in some pursuit; you need to forget your own happiness and find other goals and projects, other objects of concern that might include the welfare of some other people, or the cure of the disease, or simply in the variety of everyday activities with their little successes and setbacks.”

“Even connoisseurship can have politics, Slow Food wagers, since an eater in closer touch with his senses will find less pleasure in a box of Chicken McNuggets than in a pastured chicken or a rare breed of pig. It's all very Italian (and decidedly un-American) to insist that doing the right thing is the most pleasurable thing, and that the act of consumption might be an act of addition rather than subtraction.”

“When he [Malevranche] happened to find Descartes' book entitled Man in a book shop on the rue Saint Jaques, he leafed through it, bought it and "read it with so much pleasure that he was forced at times to interrupt his reading, so loud were the beatings of his heart due to the extreme pleasure he had in doing so". Those who never put down a book of erudition, science or philosophy, to catch their breath, so to speak, and recover from the strong emotion they experience, certainly ignore of of the most exquisite pleasures of intellectual life.”

“Il existe depuis très longtemps une immense secte d'imbéciles qui opposent sensualité et intelligence. C'est un cercle vicieux : ils se privent de volupté pour exalter leurs capacités intellectuelles, ce qui a pour résultat de les appauvrir. Ils deviennent de plus en plus stupides, ce qui les conforte dans leur conviction d'être brillants - car on n'a rien inventé de mieux que la bêtise pour se croire intelligent. La délectation rend humble et admiratif envers ce qui l'a rendue possible, le plaisir éveille l'esprit et le pousse tant à la virtuosité qu'à la profondeur. C'est une si puissante magie qu'à défaut de volupté, l'idée de volupté suffit. Du moment qu'existe cette notion, l'être est sauvé. Mais la frigidité triomphante se condamne à la célébration de son propre néant. On rencontre dans les salons des gens qui se vantent haut et fort de s'être privés de tel ou tel délice pendant vingt-cinq ans. On rencontre aussi de superbes idiots qui se glorifient de ne jamais écouter de musique, de ne jamais ouvrir un livre ou de ne jamais aller au cinéma. Il y a aussi ceux qui espèrent susciter l'admiration par leur chasteté absolue. Il faut bien qu'ils en tirent vanité : c'est le seul contentement qu'ils auront dans leur vie.”