"One of the keys to understanding our true nature and our ultimate destiny is the fact that the things of this world are never proportionate to the actual range of our intelligence. Our intelligence is made for the Absolute, or else it is nothing; the Absolute alone confers on our intelligence the power to accomplish to the full what it can accomplish and to be wholly what it is. Similarly, in the case of the will, which is no more than a prolongation or complement of the intelligence: the objects it commonly sets out to achieve, or those that life imposes on it, do not measure up to the fullness of its range; only the "divine dimension" can satisfy the thirst for plenitude in our willing or our love."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Philosophers from SwitzerlandNon-fiction authorsPoets from SwitzerlandPainters from SwitzerlandSufi poets
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Imported from EN Wikiquote
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Frithjof_Schuon
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Frithjof Schuon
1907 – 1998
Schweizer Religionsphilosoph
179 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Frithjof Schuon →
Related Quotes
"Original man was not a simian creature barely capable of speaking and standing upright; he was a quasi-immaterial bei…"
"The worldly or imperfect man journeys through life as if on a long road; if he is a believer, he sees God above him i…"
"One must not tire of affirming this: the origin of a creature is not a substance of a material kind, it is a perfect …"
"A classic example of a naive dogma is the Biblical story of creation, followed by that of the first human couple: if …"
"To say that man is "made in the image of God" means that he represents a central and not a peripheral subjectivity, a…"
"It is in man’s theomorphic nature that in his capacity as man and in God’s creative intention, he cannot be something…"
"Man is a divine manifestation, not in his accidentality and his fallen state, but in his theomorphism and his primord…"
"Moral liberty and intellectual objectivity constitute a priori man’s deiformity."
"The human being, by his nature, is condemned to the supernatural."
"Objective intelligence, free will, virtuous soul: these are the three prerogatives that constitute man."