"Let one consider, further, that the foolish vanity of man goes so far as to prefer to seem rather than to be not merely well but also happy, so that every one carefully hides where the shoe pinches, and tries to make a show of opulence, contentment, and happiness which he does not at all possess."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
No categories assigned
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
trans. William Chatterton Coupland, Routledge (2010), p. 619
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Eduard_von_Hartmann
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Related Quotes
"If we glance at the judgments of the greatest minds of all ages, we find those, who have at all found occasion to exp…"
"Kant says (Werke, vii. p. 381): “One must indeed make an ill reckoning of the worth of the journey (of life) if one c…"
"Schelling says (Werke, i. 7, p. 399): “Hence the veil of sadness that is spread over all Nature, the deep indestructi…"
"But what do such subjective expressions of opinion without annexed reasons prove? Must we not rather mistrust them be…"
"Imagine some one who is no genius, but a man with the best general culture of his time, endowed with all the other go…"
"Lastly, when we consider, as is a priori to be expected, that the same unconscious will which has created beings with…"
"In this sense Jean Paul well says: “We do not love life because it is beautiful, but because we must love it; and hen…"
"For if it is true that with the progressive intelligence of the world the illusions of existence also must be more an…"
"If I have the choice either of not at all hearing, or of hearing first for five minutes discords and then for five mi…"
"Finally, also, the competency or assurance against want and privation cannot be regarded as a positive gain or enjoym…"