"Our psychological experiences are all equally facts. There is nothing to choose between them. No psychological experience is "truer," so far as we are concerned, than any other. For even if one should correspond more closely to things in themselves as perceived by some hypothetical non-human being, it would be impossible for us to discover which it was. Science is no "truer" than common sense, or lunacy, or art, or religion. It permits us to organize our experience profitably; but tells us nothing about the real nature of the world to which our experiences are supposed to refer. From the internal reality, by which I mean the totality of psychological experiences, it actually separates us. Art, for example, deals with many more aspects of this internal reality than does science, which confines itself deliberately and by convention to the study of one very limited class of experiences — the experiences of sense."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
“One and Many,” p. 5–6
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Aldous_Huxley
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Related Quotes
"Children are remarkable for their intelligence and ardor, for their curiosity, their intolerance of shams, the clarit…"
"À qui il a été beaucoup donné, il sera beaucoup demandé."
"Imperialism is challenged from two sides. On the one hand, there is a rising tide of nationalism within the various e…"
"The religions whose theology is least preoccupied with events in time and most concerned with eternity, have been con…"
"Proverbs are always platitudes until you have personally experienced the truth of them."
"To his dog, every man is Napoleon; hence the constant popularity of dogs."
"The propagandist's purpose is to make one set of people forget that certain other sets of people are human."
"What the cinema can do better than literature or the spoken drama is to be fantastic."
"ONE of the evil results of the political subjection of one people by another is that it tends to make the subject nat…"
"Too much consistency is as bad for the mind as it is for the body. Consistency is contrary to nature, contrary to lif…"