"The one version of the bourgeois comprises the artisan, the trader, the official, the financier, and the entrepreneur, all of whom, in their own way, can claim to know what labor is. Juxtaposed to them from the beginning, stands a type of bourgeois who does research, writes poetry, composes and makes music, and philosophizes and who believes that these activities develop a world that is self-sufficient. It is obvious that these two fractions of the bourgeois ego get on only superficially and come together only in the hollow connection of property and cultivation. They create the century-long tension between the good and the evil bourgeois, the idealist and the exploiter, the visionary and the pragmatist, the ideally liberated bourgeois and the laboring bourgeois. This tension remains as inexhaustible as that between the world of work and “freedom” in general."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
pp. 63-64
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Peter_Sloterdijk
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Peter Sloterdijk
deutscher Kulturphilosoph
57 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Peter Sloterdijk →
Related Quotes
"Our thinking is becoming much more morose than precise. … Capacity of thought does not keep pace with what is problem…"
"To be “reasonable” means to put oneself into a special, rarely happy relation to the sensuous. “Be reasonable” means,…"
"Socialization through schooling, as it takes place here, and in Western societies, in general, is a priori stupefaction"
"The violent, antirationalistic impulse in Western countries is reacting to an intellectual state of affairs in which …"
"Our lethargic modernity certainly knows how to “think historically,” but it has long doubted that it lives in a meani…"
"Does not an ingenuous contact with Kantian thinking, with philosophical thinking in general, contain the risk of expo…"
"“Knowledge is power.” This is the sentence that dug the grave of philosophy in the nineteenth century. … This sentenc…"
"The question about “good origins” becomes the crux for enlightenment. It becomes more and more clear that this idea o…"
"In our thinking there is no longer any spark of the uplifting flight of concepts or of the ecstasies of understanding…"
"Psychologically, present-day cynics can be understood as borderline melancholics, who can keep their symptoms of depr…"