The Joy of Curmudgeonry

Friday, 30 March 2007

The Trousers of Decorum

›
“Every man has also his moral backside which he does not show without need and which he keeps covered as long as possible with the trousers ...
7 comments:
Wednesday, 21 March 2007

A Former Guest

›
While Voltaire was an exile in England, he observed that the peasants were “not afraid of increasing their stock of cattle, nor of tiling th...
3 comments:
Thursday, 8 March 2007

In Keeping with the Times

›
“Nothing avails: one must go forward—step by step further into decadence” [1] . Nietzsche was never one to understate his case; but if one ...
12 comments:

Fewtril #177

›
There are some who — if it were not for exaggeration — would find it difficult to believe anything they were told.
1 comment:

Fewtril #176

›
There is so little trust amongst people nowadays that in despair we might exaggerate how little there is, which may have the consequence of ...
Thursday, 1 March 2007

Decency and Democracy

›
One often hears the call for a purer democracy, as if more of the disease would abate the symptoms; and of those symptoms one is meant not t...
2 comments:

A Flutter

›
“I do not believe in democracy,” wrote H.L. Mencken, “but I am perfectly willing to admit that it provides the only really amusing form of g...
4 comments:
Tuesday, 27 February 2007

Fewtril #175

›
Insofar as true nobility of purpose is lacking, we ought to be duly thankful even for mean-spiritedness and strife; for much of the good don...
Friday, 23 February 2007

Fewtril #174

›
The good citizen of the bureaucratic state is one who has nothing beyond scrutiny, an open book whose pages can be turned and read at will b...
4 comments:

Fewtril #173

›
The ease with which moral cowards denounce the committing of lesser evils is a grotesque parody of the difficulty with which the brave have ...
Tuesday, 20 February 2007

Notes on Rorty

›
I What Kuhn, Derrida, and I believe is that it is pointless to ask whether there really are mountains or whether it is merely convenient for...
20 comments:
Friday, 16 February 2007

Fewtril #172

›
The stupidity of animals amuses us — such as a dog chasing its tail. Against such behaviour, we can cite examples of reflective humanity — s...
1 comment:

Fewtril #171

›
I have heard people criticised, abused, traduced, mocked, upbraided, annoyed, and defamed — but rarely demonised ; and yet there is much tal...
2 comments:

Fewtril #170

›
The word “God” holds more power now than it has held in many past ages — sometimes its mere utterance is enough to clear a room.
1 comment:

Fewtril #169

›
Power to the people does not translate into freedom for the person; and one is, after all, a person and not a people. How is it that anyone ...

Fewtril #168

›
Every movement must declare itself to be good if it is to become powerful, and every movement that becomes powerful attracts the bad who mus...
‹
›
Home
View web version
Powered by Blogger.